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Title: Advanced Thermodynamics Note 10 Solution Thermodynamics: Theory


1
Advanced ThermodynamicsNote 10Solution
Thermodynamics Theory
  • Lecturer ???

2
Compositions
  • Real system usually contains a mixture of fluid.
  • Develop the theoretical foundation for
    applications of thermodynamics to gas mixtures
    and liquid solutions
  • Introducing
  • chemical potential
  • partial properties
  • fugacity
  • excess properties
  • ideal solution

3
Fundamental property relation
  • The basic relation connecting the Gibbs energy to
    the temperature and pressure in any closed
    system
  • applied to a single-phase fluid in a closed
    system wherein no chemical reactions occur.
  • Consider a single-phase, open system

4
Define the chemical potential
The fundamental property relation for
single-phase fluid systems of constant or
variable composition
When n 1,
Solution properties, M Partial properties,
Pure-species properties, Mi
The Gibbs energy is expressed as a function of
its canonical variables.
5
Chemical potential and phase equilibria
  • Consider a closed system consisting of two phases
    in equilibrium

Mass balance
Multiple phases at the same T and P are in
equilibrium when chemical potential of each
species is the same in all phases.
6
Partial properties
  • Define the partial molar property of species i
  • the chemical potential and the particle molar
    Gibbs energy are identical
  • for thermodynamic property M

7
and
Calculation of mixture properties from partial
properties
The Gibbs/Duhem equation
8
Partial properties in binary solution
  • For binary system

Const. P and T, using Gibbs/Duhem equation
9
The need arises in a laboratory for 2000 cm3 of
an antifreeze solution consisting of 30 mol-
methanol in water. What volumes of pure methanol
and of pure water at 25C must be mixed to form
the 2000 cm3 of antifreeze at 25C? The partial
and pure molar volumes are given.
Fig 11.2
10
Fig 11.2
11
The enthalpy of a binary liquid system of species
1 and 2 at fixed T and P is Determine
expressions for and as functions of
x1, numerical values for the pure-species
enthalpies H1 and H2, and numerical values for
the partial enthalpies at infinite dilution
and
12
Relations among partial properties
  • Maxwell relation

13
Ideal-gas mixture
  • Gibbss theorem
  • A partial molar property (other than volume) of a
    constituent species in an ideal-gas mixture is
    equal to the corresponding molar property of the
    species as a pure ideal gas at the mixture
    temperature but at a pressure equal to its
    partial pressure in the mixture.

14
For those independent of pressure, e.g.,
For those depend on pressure, e.g.,
or
From integration of
15
Fugacity and fugacity coefficient
  • Chemical potential
  • provides fundamental criterion for phase
    equilibria
  • however, the Gibbs energy, hence µi, is defined
    in relation to the internal energy and entropy -
    (absolute values are unknown).
  • Fugacity
  • a quantity that takes the place of µi

With units of pressure
16
Fugacity coefficient
Residual Gibbs energy
17
VLE for pure species
  • Saturated vapor
  • Saturated liquid

VLE
For a pure species coexisting liquid and vapor
phases are in equilibrium when they have the same
temperature, pressure, fugacity and fugacity
coefficient.
18
Fugacity of a pure liquid
  • The fugacity of pure species i as a compressed
    liquid

Since Vi is a weak function of P
19
For H2O at a temperature of 300C and for
pressures up to 10,000 kPa (100 bar) calculate
values of fi and fi from data in the steam tables
and plot them vs. P.
For a state at P
For a low pressure reference state
The low pressure (say 1 kPa) at 300C
For different values of P up to the saturated
pressure at 300C, one obtains the values of fi
,and hence fi . Note, values of fi and fi at
8592.7 kPa are obtained
Values of fi andfi at higher pressure
Fig 11.3
20
Fig 11.3
21
Fugacity and fugacity coefficient species in
solution
  • For species i in a mixture of real gases or in a
    solution of liquids
  • Multiple phases at the same T and P are in
    equilibrium when the fugacity of each constituent
    species is the same in all phases

Fugacity of species i in solution (replacing the
particle pressure)
22
The residual property
The partial residual property
For ideal gas,
The fugacity coefficient of species i in solution
23
Fundamental residual-property relation
G/RT as a function of its canonical variables
allows evaluation of all other thermodynamic
properties, and implicitly contains complete
property information.
The residual properties
or
24
Fix T and composition
Fix P and composition
Fix T and P
25
Develop a general equation for calculation of
values form compressibility-factor data.
Integration at constant temperature and
composition
26
Fugacity coefficient from the virial E.O.S
  • The virial equation
  • the mixture second virial coefficient B
  • for a binary mixture
  • n mol of gas mixture

27
Similarly
For multicomponent gas mixture, the general form
where
28
Determine the fugacity coefficients for nitrogen
and methane in N2(1)/CH4(2) mixture at 200K and
30 bar if the mixture contains 40 mol- N2.
29
Generalized correlations for the fugacity
coefficient
For pure gas
or
with
For pure gas
Table E1E4 or Table E13E16
30
Estimate a value for the fugacity of 1-butene
vapor at 200C and 70 bar.
and
Table E15 and E16
For gas mixture
Empirical interaction parameter
Prausnitz et al. 1986
31
Estimate and for an equimolar
mixture of methyl ethyl ketone (1) / toluene (2)
at 50C and 25 kPa. Set all kij 0.
32
The ideal solution
  • Serves as a standard to be compared

cf.
33
The Lewis/Randall Rule
  • For a special case of species i in an ideal
    solution

The Lewis/Randall rule
The fugacity coefficient of species i in an ideal
solution is equal to the fugacity coefficient of
pure species i in the same physical state as the
solution and at the same T and P.
34
Excess properties
  • The mathematical formalism of excess properties
    is analogous to that of the residual properties
  • where M represents the molar (or unit-mass) value
    of any extensive thermodynamic property (e.g., V,
    U, H, S, G, etc.)
  • Similarly, we have

The fundamental excess-property relation
35
Table 11.1
36
(1) If CEP is a constant, independent of T, find
expression for GE, SE, and HE as functions of T.
(2) From the equations developed in part (1),
fine values for GE , SE, and HE for an equilmolar
solution of benzene(1) / n-hexane(2) at 323.15K,
given the following excess-property values for
equilmolar solution at 298.15K CEP -2.86
J/mol-K, HE 897.9 J/mol, and GE 384.5 J/mol
From Table 11.1
integration
From Table 11.1
integration
integration
We have values of a, b, c and hence the
excess-properties at 323.15K
37
The excess Gibbs energy and the activity
coefficient
  • The excess Gibbs energy is of particular interest

The activity coefficient of species i in
solution. A factor introduced into Raoults law
to account for liquid-phase non-idealities. For
ideal solution,
c.f.
38
Experimental accessible values activity
coefficients from VLE data, VE and HE values come
from mixing experiments.
Important application in phase-equilibrium
thermodynamics.
39
The nature of excess properties
  • GE through reduction of VLE data
  • HE from mixing experiment
  • SE (HE - GE) / T
  • Fig 11.4
  • excess properties become zero as either species
    1.
  • GE is approximately parabolic in shape HE and
    TSE exhibit individual composition dependence.
  • The extreme value of ME often occurs near the
    equilmolar composition.

40
Fig 11.4
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