ChemE 260 Internal Energy, Enthalpy - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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ChemE 260 Internal Energy, Enthalpy

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ChemE 260 Internal Energy, Enthalpy & The NIST Webbook Dr. William Baratuci Senior Lecturer Chemical Engineering Department University of Washington – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ChemE 260 Internal Energy, Enthalpy


1
ChemE 260 Internal Energy, Enthalpy The NIST
Webbook
  • Dr. William Baratuci
  • Senior Lecturer
  • Chemical Engineering Department
  • University of Washington
  • TCD 3 A BCB 2 9 11, Supplement

April 5, 2005
2
Internal Energy Enthalpy
  • Internal Energy
  • Non-nuclear energy stored within molecules
  • Sum of the vibrational, translational and
    rotational kinetic energies
  • U strong fxn of T and a weak fxn of P
  • U ? sharply as T ? but U ? slightly as P ?.
  • Ideal Gas, Incompressible Liquids, Solids
  • U fxn(T) only
  • U ? fxn(P)
  • Enthalpy
  • H U P V dH dH d(PV) ?H ?U ?(PV)
  • H strong fxn(T)
  • H moderate fxn(P)
  • Ideal Gas H ? fxn(P)S

Baratuci ChemE 260 April 5, 2005
3
NIST Webbook
Baratuci ChemE 260 April 5, 2005
4
Reference State
  • We cannot determine an absolute U or H in the way
    we can determine an absolute T.
  • We must choose a reference state andassign
    0 or 0 at that state.
  • Calculate all other values of and
    relative to the reference state.
  • You cannot use thermodynamic data from different
    sources that are based on different reference
    states without correcting for the difference in
    reference state !!

Baratuci ChemE 260 April 5, 2005
5
Generating a Saturated Temperature Table
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Baratuci ChemE 260 April 5, 2005
6
Saturated Liquid Properties
Baratuci ChemE 260 April 5, 2005
7
Saturated Vapor Properties
Baratuci ChemE 260 April 5, 2005
8
Extra Info from the NIST Webbook
Baratuci ChemE 260 April 5, 2005
9
Example 1
  • Determine the Tsat, and of saturated
    liquid ammonia at 300 kPa. (Default ref. state)
  • Ans. Tsat -9.2243 oC U 300.25 kJ/kg H
    300.71 kJ/kg

Baratuci ChemE 260 April 5, 2005
10
Example 2
  • Determine the , and of butane at
    14.696 psia and 77oF in units of Btu, lbm and
    ft3. (Default ref. state)
  • Ans. V 6.5394 ft3/lbm U 251.92Btu/lbm H
    269.71 Btu/lbm

Baratuci ChemE 260 April 5, 2005
11
Example 3
  • Determine the , and of a
    saturated mixture of R-123 at 40oC and x 0.30.
    (Default ref. state, kJ, mole, m3)
  • Ans. Psat 3.5752 Kpa Usat liq 24.660
    kJ/mol , Usat vap 52.800 kJ/mol , Ux0.03
    33.102 kJ/mol Hsat liq 24.660 kJ/mol, Hsat vap
    54.731 kJ/mol, Hx0.03 33.681 kJ/mol Vsat
    liq 9.4405 x 10-5 m3/mol, Vsat vap 0.54014
    m3/mol , Vx0.03 0.16211 m3/mol

Baratuci ChemE 260 April 5, 2005
12
Next Class
  • Heat Capacities
  • How much does the temperature of 1 mole or kg of
    a substance change when 1 J is added ?
  • Phase Changes
  • Latent heats of vaporization, fusion and
    sublimation
  • Hypothetical Process Paths
  • HPPs make it easier to calculate how much a
    property changes during any real process.

Baratuci ChemE 260 April 5, 2005
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