posted on 2014-10-01, 00:00authored byM. V.
S. R. Ravi Kanth, S. Pushpavanam, Shankar Narasimhan, Murty
B. Narasimha
Prediction of liquid–liquid
phase equilibria in reacting
systems is important in many applications such as reactive extraction.
This problem poses several numerical challenges. These systems are
governed by highly nonlinear algebraic equations and are plagued by
the issue of nonconvergence of iterative algorithms. They exhibit
strong sensitivity to the choice of the initial values or starting
guesses for the variables. The nonconvergence stems primarily from
the wide range of concentrations of various species at equilibrium.
In this work, a new methodology for predicting thermodynamic equilibria
of multiphase reacting systems is proposed. The mathematical formulation
and solution are based on the use of the logarithms of the concentrations
as the dependent variables. The proposed algorithm shows rapid convergence
even when the initial guesses are far from equilibrium. The efficiency
of the method is demonstrated by predicting the equilibrium concentrations
of species in three systems of varying degrees of complexity.