Title: Mass Transfer Effects Resulting from Immobilization
1Mass Transfer Effects Resulting from
Immobilization
- Immobilization of an enzyme transforms a
homogeneous (soluble) catalyst into a
heterogeneous (insoluble) system. While this
technique often improves enzyme stability and
allows for its retention within a continuous
reactor, it also introduces mass transfer effects
that require careful design consideration. - Carrier binding techniques
- introduce external mass
- transfer effects between
- the liquid phase and the
- solid surface.
- Entrapment methods fix
- the enzyme in a polymeric
- matrix, creating internal mass
- transfer effects that are
- diffusion processes.
2External Mass Transfer Effects
- An enzyme immobilized through binding to a
carrier bead and placed in a simple flow may be
represented by the following illustration. - The change in concentration of a reagent A from
Abulk to Asurface takes place in a narrow
fluid layer next to the surface of the sphere. - In all but the simplest cases, we express the
mass transfer rate as - where NA transfer rate mole/s
- kc convective mass transfer coefficient m/s
- AP surface area of the particle m2
- A concentration of solute at the surface
and in the bulk, - respectively mole/m3
3Convective Mass Transfer Coefficient, kc
- Having defined kc by the rate equation for
convective mass transfer, - it remains for engineers to determine its value
for different situations. This is a difficult
task, as kc is influenced by - properties of the fluid (density, viscosity)
- dynamic characteristics of the fluid (velocity
field) - properties of the solute (diffusivity)
- In complex situations we apply mass transfer
correlations of the form -
- where, Sh Sherwood number kcd/DAB
- Re Reynolds number rvd/m
- Sc Schmidt number m/rDAB
- Estimating kc therefore requires a characteristic
dimension (d), solute diffusivity (DAB), fluid
velocity (v) as well as fluid density (r ) and
viscosity(m).
4External Mass Transfer Single Sphere
- Extensive data have been compiled for the
transfer of mass between moving fluid and certain
shapes, such as flat plates, spheres and
cylinders. - For a single sphere the Froessling equation can
be used - provided that Re is within 2-800 and Sc is within
0.6-2.7. - Catalytic reactors seldom use such simple
geometry, and designers must search the
literature for correlations that apply to their
particular configuration, flow patterns as well
as fluid and solute properties.
5Antibiotic Synthesis in an Immobilized Enzyme PFR
- To illustrate the type of analysis required for
heterogeneous catalytic reactor design, consider
the large scale production of a modified
antibiotic using a PFR configuration. - Q 1 LPM
- Ao 0.3 M
-
- T 20?C
- A 0.024 M
You are required to process 1 litre per minute of
an aqueous solution containing 0.3 M of
substrate. The desired conversion is 80. Rate
data for the immobilized enzyme have been
acquired. The system follows Michaelis-Menten
kinetics, and given 95 particles per litre of
solution, the reaction rate is given by
6Assumptions Made in the PFR Analysis
- To simplify the preliminary design process a
series of assumptions regarding both the catalyst
and the fluid flow characteristics - Catalytic Reaction Simplifications
- enzyme is stable over the time course of the
reaction - no product or reactant inhibition takes place
- the reaction is irreversible
- Plug Flow Reactor Simplifications
- No axial mixing (backmixing) to disrupt plug flow
- Isothermal process
- No change in fluid properties upon reaction
- These simplifications are often unjustified.
Real PFR design would use much more detailed
reaction rate and residence time distribution
information.
7PFR Design Equation
- Given that Michaelis-Menten kinetics applies to
this immobilized enzyme case, the governing rate
expression is - Vmax 3.84E-5 M-1s-1
- Km 0.05 M-1
- Rearranging yields,
- and integration generates the PFR design
equation - We can express this design equation in terms of
reactant conversion, X (A0 -A)/(A0
8PFR Design Equation
- Up to this point the design equation is explicit
in time, as required for a batch process. - Given that the residence time for the reactor is
tres V/Q, - where V reactor liquid holdup m3
- Q liquid volumetric flow rate m3/s
- Given our process requirements
- Ao 0.3 M Q 1 LPM X 0.80
- the liquid phase volume of our PFR is
- V 139 liters
- and the total PFR volume including immobilized
enzyme is - Vtot V / e
- 139/0.6 232 liters
9PFR Sizing
- Reaction kinetics for an ideal PFR dictate that
the total reactor volume needed to achieve 80
conversion is 232 liters. - To minimize backmixing, we need the reactor
length to be much greater than the diameter. - For convenience, a single straight-run PFR is
desirable, so we will (arbitrarily) choose L/D
15. - D
- Given a total volume of 232 liters and
- an aspect ratio of 15
- column diameter 0.27 m
- column length 4.05 m
- L
- These are physically realizable dimensions.
10PFR Reaction Profile - Substrate Consumption Rate
- To this point we have ignored mass transfer by
treating the process as kinetic controlled. This
is true only when the rate of mass transfer is
sufficient to supply - substrate to the immobilized
- enzyme site.
- Is the rate of reaction
- limited by mass transfer?
- Given that mass transfer
- is governed by the following
- are kc (Re, Sc) and Ap
- great enough to avoid
- depletion of substrate at the
- liquid-solid interface?
11Mass Transfer Correlation for a Packed Bed
- Mass transfer between liquids and beds of spheres
has been studied experimentally and the data
correlated to - for the range (0.0016ltRelt55, 165ltSclt70600,
0.35ltelt0.075) - where e void fraction of the packed bed
- kc convective mass transfer coefficient m/s
- v? bulk fluid velocity m/s
- Sc Schmidt number n/DAB (dimensionless)
- n kinematic viscosity (m/r) m2/s
- DAB Diffusivity of solute in water m2/s
- Re Reynolds number dpG/m
- dp particle diameter m
- G mass per unit time per unit of empty
column - cross-sectional area kg/m2 s
- m fluid viscosity kg/ms
12kc for Our Packed Bed Reactor
- Rearranging our correlation for mass transfer in
a packed column - gives us kc as a function of
- easily(!) estimated properties.
- Bulk Velocity, v? 4.85E-04 m/s
- Void Fraction, e 0.6
- Particle diameter 2.00E-02 m
- Fluid viscosity 9.94E-4 Pa.s
- Mass flux 0.29 kg/m2s (liq flowdensity/empty
column area) - Re 5.85 (in range of correlation)
- Diffusivity, DAB 2.010-9 m2/s
- Kinematic viscosity, n 9.9510-7 m2/s
- Sc 497 (in range of correlation)
- Therefore,
- kc 2.4110-6 m/s
13Extent of Mass Transfer Limitation
- The maximum demand for substrate takes place at
the entrance of the reactor where A is
greatest. From our PFR conversion calculations
(see slide 10), - rA, max 3.2910-5 mole/l s
- The mass transfer rate per particle is given by
- For which the maximum transfer rate (As0) is
- Given that we have 95 particles for each litre,
- Therefore, the reaction rate at the top of our
PFR is completely mass transfer limited to a
maximum rate of 2.210-5 mole/ls and we would not
achieve our desired conversion with the current
design.