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pH Oscillations in the BrO<sub>3</sub><sup>-</sup>−SO<sub>3</sub><sup>2-</sup>/HSO<sub>3</sub><sup>-</sup> Reaction in a CSTR
55
Citations
23
References
2005
Year
EngineeringPh OscillatorChemistryDesulfurizationIon ProcessPh OscillationsChemical EngineeringProtonation EquilibriaReaction IntermediatePhysicsAtomic PhysicsPhysical ChemistryCatalysisLarge-amplitude Ph OscillationsHydrogenElectrochemistryNatural SciencesProton TransferReaction ProcessChemical Kinetics
Large-amplitude pH oscillations have been measured during the oxidation of sulfur (IV) species by the bromate ion in aqueous solution in a continuous-flow stirred tank reactor in the absence of any additional oxidizing or reducing reagent. The source of the oscillation in this simple chemical reaction is a two-way oxidation of sulfur (IV) by the bromate ion: (1) the hydrogen-ion-producing self-accelerating oxidation to sulfur (VI) (SO4(2-)), and (2) a hydrogen-ion-consuming oxidation to sulfur (V) (S2O6(2-)). In such a way, both the H+-producing and H+-consuming composite processes required for a pH oscillator take place in parallel in a reaction between two reagents in this system. A simple reaction scheme, consisting of the protonation equilibria of SO3(2-) and HSO3-, the oxidation of HSO3- and H2SO3 by BrO3- to SO4(2-), and the oxidation of H2SO3 to S2O6(2-) has successfully been used to simulate the observed dynamical behavior. Simulation with this simple scheme shows that oscillations can be calculated even if only about 1% of sulfur (IV) is oxidized to S2O6(2-) along with the main product SO4(2-). Agreement between calculated and measured dynamical behavior is found to be quite good. Increasing temperature decreases both the period length of oscillations in a CSTR and the Landolt time measured in a closed reactor. No temperature compensation of the oscillatory frequency is found in this reaction.
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