2016 AIChE Annual Meeting
(247e) Port Hamiltonian Approach to Modeling and Control of Coupled Chemical Reactors
the modeling of a Continuous Stirred Tank Reactor (CSTR) to a large set of Partial Differential
Equations (PDEs) for tubular reactors. Usually, models of chemical reactors are developed
on the basis of the conservation of extensive quantities, namely balance of energy, mass,
momentum and entropy. Due to the coupling between reaction and transport phenomena,
these models usually exhibit very complex behavior.
Port Hamiltonian framework has been widely applied in finite-dimensional processes in
chemical, electrical, mechanical domains, e.g. CSTR (see [1]). Recently, Port Hamiltonian
theory was developed and generalized to infinite-dimensional systems, see [2] [3] [4]. In [4], it
is shown that many infinite-dimensional processes in chemical and mechanical domains falls
into the category of Port Hamiltonian systems, e.g. most of hyperbolic systems. Moreover,
under the Port Hamiltonian framework, the energy-based control approaches are investigated.
In this work, we propose a Port Hamiltonian representation of a distributed reactor for
control purpose. The Hamiltonian representation provides powerful analysis methods (e.g.
for stability), and it enables the use of Lyapunov-stability theory and passivity-based control.
In particular, Hamiltonian representation is powerful when addressing the boundary control
of distributed parameter systems. We discuss how the state variables are chosen in such a
way that geometric properties of the model are emphasized. The chemical reactors given in
[5] are studied in this work and the presentation of the considered reactors is given for one
dimensional spatial domain by utilizing the internal energy.
[1] Hoang, H., Couenne, F., Jallut, C., and Le Gorrec, Y. (2011). The port Hamiltonian approach
to modeling and control of Continuous Stirred Tank Reactors. Journal of Process Control,
21(10), 1449--1458.
[2] Villegas, J. A., Zwart, H., Gorrec, Y. L., and Maschke, B. (2009). Exponential stability of a
class of boundary control systems. Automatic Control, IEEE Transactions on, 54(1), 142--147.
[3] Wu, Y. (2015). Passivity preserving balanced reduction for the nite and innite dimensional
port Hamiltonian systems (Doctoral dissertation, Universit Claude Bernard-Lyon I).
[4] Jacob, B., and Zwart, H. (2012). Linear port-Hamiltonian systems on innite-dimensional
spaces (Vol. 223). Springer Science & Business Media.
[5] Ramkrishna, D., and Amundson, N. R. (1974). Stirred pots, tubular reactors, and self-adjoint
operators. Chemical Engineering Science, 29(6), 1353--1361.