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The governing mass transfer equation is derived from a mass balance applied to a differential control volume and Fick's Law. It includes all possible mechanisms that can contribute to mass transfer in a system, and encapsulates the combined effects of mass storage, diffusion, convection, and generation or disappearance of a species, and allows the prediction of the concentration profile within the system. It combines the mass balance over a system with Fick's Law.
It can be used to describe the concentration of a species in any kind of mass transfer situation. The result is a function that is valid at all points in a control volume, at all times (e.g., \( c_A(x,y,z,t) \)). While mass transfer can occur in three dimensions, it is simplified here to be solved with mass moving only in one direction (x,r). The governing mass transfer equation can be written in Cartesian or radial coordinates.In practice, many problems involve simplifying assumptions (e.g., system at steady state, no bulk flow in the system, or no generation or disappearance of species A), which allow certain terms to be removed. The meaning of each term and the conditions under which it should be retained or dropped are summarized below.
| Term | What is it? | When do I keep it? | When can I drop it? |
|---|---|---|---|
| \( \frac{\partial c_A}{\partial t} \) | Stored mass | Unsteady state, \( c_A \) changing with time (transient) | Steady state (constant \( c_A \)) |
| \( u\frac{\partial c_A}{\partial x} \) | Bulk flow (Convection) | Fluid flow or bulk movement through the system | No flow, typically in a solid |
| \( D_{AB} \frac{\partial ^2 c_A}{\partial x^2} \) | Diffusion | Almost always in diffusion mass transfer problems | Slow diffusion in relation to generation or convection |
| \( r_A \) | Generation | Chemical reaction or conversion from/to species A | No chemical reaction or mass source |
Table 1: Governing equation terms and simplifications.
To obtain a particular solution, we must solve the general governing equation utilizing known quantities called boundary conditions (BCs, which describe mass transfer at particular surfaces and interfaces) as well as initial conditions (ICs, for unsteady state or time-dependent problems).
Concentration at the surface can be specified as a constant or a function of time.
Mass flux at the surface is specified as a constant or a function of time. There are two special cases for this boundary condition:
When there is a fluid at the surface, the flow of mass due to diffusion can be set equal to the flow due to convection. There is one special case for this boundary condition:
At the surface, the amount of mass diffused through the solid or liquid is equal to the amount of mass convected away by the fluid:
The left side represents diffusion in the solid or liquid, while the right side represents convection in the fluid.
An initial condition provides information about what is happening within the system (e.g., the concentration) at the start of our period of interest. This is necessary to solve a time-varying (i.e., unsteady state) problem.