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This document appears to be 12 pages from Chapter 3 of a textbook on formulation and approximation. Each page is titled "Chapter 3 - Formulation and Approximation" along with the page number. On page 11, there is a multi-part problem presented regarding the diffusion of species A from a shrinking gas bubble into a liquid where it reacts via a first-order irreversible reaction. The problem asks the reader to determine the concentration profile of A in the liquid, compare flux at the interface with and without reaction, identify conditions where bubble shrinkage effects can be neglected, and when a pseudosteady analysis is justified.
This document appears to be 12 pages from Chapter 3 of a textbook on formulation and approximation. Each page is titled "Chapter 3 - Formulation and Approximation" along with the page number. On page 11, there is a multi-part problem presented regarding the diffusion of species A from a shrinking gas bubble into a liquid where it reacts via a first-order irreversible reaction. The problem asks the reader to determine the concentration profile of A in the liquid, compare flux at the interface with and without reaction, identify conditions where bubble shrinkage effects can be neglected, and when a pseudosteady analysis is justified.
This document appears to be 12 pages from Chapter 3 of a textbook on formulation and approximation. Each page is titled "Chapter 3 - Formulation and Approximation" along with the page number. On page 11, there is a multi-part problem presented regarding the diffusion of species A from a shrinking gas bubble into a liquid where it reacts via a first-order irreversible reaction. The problem asks the reader to determine the concentration profile of A in the liquid, compare flux at the interface with and without reaction, identify conditions where bubble shrinkage effects can be neglected, and when a pseudosteady analysis is justified.
P. 3.18 Effect of Reaction on Absorption from a Bubble
Consider a small gas bubble of radius R(t) that is rising slowly in a stagnant liquid. The bubble contains pure species A , which diffuses into the liquid and is consumed there by a first-order, irreversible reaction with rate constant kV . The liquid-phase concentration of A at the interface is C0 and no A is present far from the bubble. Assume that the effects of bubble rise are negligible. (a) Assuming that absorption is slow enough to make the concentration profile pseudosteady and that convective transport casued by bubble shrinkage is negligible, determine C A (r,t) in the liquid. How does the flux of A at the gas-liquid interface, N Ar (R,t) , compare with that in the absence of reaction? (b) Under what conditions can convective transport caused by bubble shrinkage be neglected? Specifically, how must C0 compare with the concentration of A in the bubble ( Cb )? (c) Assuming that the conditions of part (b) are satisfied, identify when a pseudosteady analysis is justified.