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Destilación Reactiva×Modelo de Reactor Tubular (PFR)×Análisis de pinch×
CampoFísica aplicadaFísica aplicadaFísica aplicada
FamiliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Año de origen199519621978
Autor originalKlaus SundmacherOctave LevenspielBodo Linnhoff, John Flower
TipoIntegrated reaction-separation process modelMathematical model for plug-flow reactorThermal design and optimization method
Fuente seminalSundmacher, K., & Kienle, A. (2003). Reactive Distillation: Status and Future Directions. Wiley-VCH. ISBN: 978-3-527-30623-9Levenspiel, O. (1999). Chemical Reaction Engineering (3rd ed.). John Wiley & Sons. ISBN: 978-0-471-25424-9Linnhoff, B., & Flower, J. R. (1978). Synthesis of heat exchanger networks: I. Systematic generation of energy optimal networks. AIChE Journal, 24(4), 633-642. DOI ↗
Aliasintegrated distillation-reaction, reactive column, reaction with separationideal tubular reactor, plug-flow model, PFRheat integration, pinch point method, process integration
Relacionados434
ResumenReactive distillation couples reaction and separation in a single column, where reactants are separated from products continuously while simultaneously undergoing reaction on catalytic trays. Pioneered in the 1990s by Klaus Sundmacher and others, this process intensification technique dramatically reduces capital cost, energy consumption, and environmental impact for suitable reactions. It is now industrially proven for esterification, hydration, and transesterification processes.The PFR (Plug Flow Reactor) model describes the behavior of a tubular reactor in which fluid elements move through as distinct plugs with no axial mixing. Fluid at the inlet is freshly unreacted; as it travels downstream, reactions progress. This idealized model, formalized by Octave Levenspiel alongside CSTR theory, is the opposite extreme: while CSTRs are fully mixed, PFRs have no axial mixing. In practice, PFRs achieve higher conversion than CSTRs for the same residence time and are widely used in the chemical and petroleum industries.Pinch analysis is a systematic method for identifying the minimum energy requirements and optimal heat recovery opportunities in chemical processes. Developed by Bodo Linnhoff and John Flower in 1978, it graphically identifies the 'pinch point'—the most constrained part of the process where heating and cooling demands nearly balance. By targeting these bottlenecks, engineers can design energy-efficient heat exchanger networks and reduce operating costs dramatically.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Reactive Distillation · PFR Model · Pinch Analysis. Recuperado el 2026-06-19 de https://scholargate.app/es/compare