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EQUATION OF STATE CHAPTER 2
26

EQUATION OF STATE

Mar 22, 2016

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CHAPTER 2. EQUATION OF STATE. Equation of state. An equation of state is a relation between state variables It is a thermodynamic equation describing the state of matter under a given set of physical conditions. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: EQUATION OF STATE

EQUATION OF STATE

CHAPTER 2

Page 2: EQUATION OF STATE

• An equation of state is a relation between state variables

• It is a thermodynamic equation describing the state of matter under a given set of physical conditions.

• It is a constitutive equation which provides a mathematical relationship between two or more state functions associated with the matter, such as its temperature, pressure, volume, or internal energy.

• Equations of state are useful in describing the properties of fluids, mixtures of fluids, solids, and even the interior of stars.

EQUATION OF STATE

Page 3: EQUATION OF STATE

Assumption:

1) the gas consists of a large number of molecules, which are in random motion and obey Newton's laws of motion;

2) the volume of the molecules is negligibly small compared to the volume occupied by the gas; and

3) no forces act on the molecules except during elastic collisions of negligible duration.

CLASSICAL IDEAL GAS LAW

PV = RT

Page 4: EQUATION OF STATE

CUBIC EQUATIONS OF STATE

1. Van der Waals equation of state2. Redlich–Kwong equation of state3. Soave modification of Redlich–Kwong4. Peng–Robinson equation of state

Page 5: EQUATION OF STATE

VAN DER WAALS EQUATION OF STATE

The van der Waals equation may be considered as the ideal gas law, “improved” due to two independent reasons: Molecules are thought as particles with volume, not

material points. Thus V cannot be too little, less than some constant. So we get (V – b) instead of V.

We consider molecules attracting others within a distance of several molecules' radii affects pressure we get dengan (P + a/V2) instead of P.

Page 6: EQUATION OF STATE

RTbVVaP 2

where V is molar volume

The substance-specific constants a and b can be calculated from the critical properties Pc, Tc, and Vc as

c

2c

2

c

2c

2

PTR

6427

PTR

6427a

c

c

c

c

PTR

81

PTR

81b

Page 7: EQUATION OF STATE

Cubic form of vdW eos

2Va

bVRTP

0P

abVPaV

PRTbV 23

0ABZAZ1BZ 23

2r

r22 T

P6427

TRaPA

r

r

TR

81

RTbPB

Page 8: EQUATION OF STATE

Principle of Corresponding States (PCS)

The principle of Corresponding States (PCS) was stated by van der Waals and reads: “Substances behave alike at the same reduced states. Substances at same reduced states are at corresponding states.”

Reduced properties provide a measure of the “departure” of the conditions of the substance from its own critical conditions and are defined as follows

cr T

TT c

r PPP

cr V

VV

Page 9: EQUATION OF STATE

• The PCS says that all gases behave alike at the same reduced conditions.

• That is, if two gases have the same “relative departure” from criticality (i.e., they are at the same reduced conditions), the corresponding state principle demands that they behave alike.

• In this case, the two conditions “correspond” to one another, and we are to expect those gases to have the same properties.

Page 10: EQUATION OF STATE

Reduced form of vdW EOS:

rr2r

r T81V3V3P

• This equation is “universal”. • It does not care about which fluids we are talking about.

• Just give it the reduced conditions “Pr, Tr” and it will give you back Vr — regardless of the fluid.

• As long as two gases are at corresponding states (same reduced conditions), it does not matter what components you are talking about, or what is the nature of the substances you are talking about; they will behave alike.

Page 11: EQUATION OF STATE

The compressibility factor at the critical point, which is defined as

c

ccc RT

VPZ

Zc is predicted to be a constant independent of substance by many equations of state; the Van der Waals equation e.g. predicts a value of 0.375

Page 12: EQUATION OF STATE

Substance ValueH2O 0.23He 0.30H2 0.30Ne 0.29N2 0.29Ar 0.29

Zc of various substances

Page 13: EQUATION OF STATE

Standing-Katz Compressibility Factor Chart

Application of PCS

Page 14: EQUATION OF STATE

REDLICH-KWONG EOS

The Redlich–Kwong equation is adequate for calculation of gas phase properties when:

bVVa

bVRTP

c

2c

2

PTR42748.0a

c

c

PTR08662.0b

cc T2T

PP

21rT

Page 15: EQUATION OF STATE

Cubic form of RK eos

bVVa

bVRTP

0ABZBBAZZ 223

2r

r22 T

P42748.0TRPaA

r

r

TP08662.0

RTbPB

Page 16: EQUATION OF STATE

SOAVE-REDLICH-KWONG EOS

bVVa

bVRTP

c

2c

2

PTR42748.0a

c

c

PTR08662.0b

25.0r

2 T115613.055171.148508.01

r2 T30288.0exp202.1:HorF

Page 17: EQUATION OF STATE

Cubic form of SRK eos

bVVa

bVRTP

0ABZBBAZZ 223

2r

r22 T

P42748.0TRPaA

r

r

TP08662.0

RTbPB

Page 18: EQUATION OF STATE

PENG-ROBINSON EOS

22 bbV2Va

bVRTP

c

2c

2

PTR45724.0a

c

c

PTR07780.0b

25.0r

2 T12699.054226.137464.01

Page 19: EQUATION OF STATE

Cubic form of PR eos

0BBABZB3B2AZB1Z 32223

2r

r22 T

P45724.0TRPaA

r

r

TP07780.0

RTbPB

22 bbV2Va

bVRTP

Page 20: EQUATION OF STATE

SOLVING CUBIC EQUATION

0cZcZcZ 012

23

eos c2 c1 c0vdW – B – 1 A – ABRK – 1 A – B – B2 – ABSRK – 1 A – B – B2 – ABPR B – 1 A – 2B – 3B2 AB – B2 – B3

Page 21: EQUATION OF STATE

0cZcZcZ 012

23

27ccK

21

2

01232 c27cc9c2

221L

4L

27KD

23

(determinant)

Calculate:

31

D2LM

31

D2LN

Page 22: EQUATION OF STATE

Case 1: D > 01 real root and 2 imaginary roots

3cNMZ 2

1

Case 2: D = 0 three real roots and at least two are equal

3cNMZ 2

1

3cNM

21ZZ 2

32

Page 23: EQUATION OF STATE

Case 3: D < 0three, distinct, real roots

3ck120cos

3K2Z 2

i

Where k = 0 for i = 1k = 1 for i = 2k = 2 for i = 3

27K4Lcos 3

21

The minus sign applies when B > 0, The plus sign applies when B < 0.

Page 24: EQUATION OF STATE

NON CUBIC EQUATIONS OF STATE

VIRIAL EOS

...VD

VC

VB1Z 32

2P'CP'B1RTPVZ

RTB'B 2

2

RTBC'C

3

3

RTB2BC3D'D

Page 25: EQUATION OF STATE

DIETERICI EOS

RTVaRTebVP

Rb4aTc 22c eb4

aP b2Vc

Page 26: EQUATION OF STATE

MIXTURE• For mixtures, we apply the same equation, but we

impose certain mixing rules to obtain “a” and “b”, which are functions of the properties of the pure components.

• We create a new “pseudo” pure substance that has the average properties of the mixture.

i j

ijjim ayya

i

iim byb

jiijij aak1a