chemical thermodynamics 2013/2014
DESCRIPTION
Chemical Thermodynamics 2013/2014. 2 nd Lecture: Zeroth Law, Gases and Equations of State Valentim M B Nunes, UD de Engenharia. The Gaseous State. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
ChemicalChemical ThermodynamicsThermodynamics2013/20142013/2014
2nd Lecture: Zeroth Law, Gases and Equations of StateValentim M B Nunes, UD de Engenharia
2
The Gaseous The Gaseous StateState
When studying Thermodynamics we don’t need any theory about molecular structure but, in order to understand the subject, its good to have in mind molecular models for the states of matter. The gaseous state it is often taken as an example to describe the principles of Thermodynamics.
In this Lecture we will review some of the basic concepts about the gaseous state, namely the concepts of pressure and temperature, and the basic laws of gases.
3
Ideal GasesIdeal Gases
A good vision of an ideal gas is an assembly of molecules, with sizes much smaller than average distances travelled between collisions, in continuous random (chaotic) movement, with velocities that increase with temperature, and that only interact in elastic collisionsFor a given system with volume, V, number of moles, n, and at pressure, p, and temperature, T, we say that it is at a given thermodynamic state. All this properties are not independent from each other. In other words they are related by an Equation of State.Before proceeding to those equations of state let us examine the concepts of pressure and temperature.
PressurePressure
4
The pressure is a force exerted by an unit area. In the International System (SI) the unit for pressure is the Pascal (Pa).
1 Pa = 1 N.m-2
1 bar = 100 kPa (exact value)
1 atm = 101325 Pa (exact value)
1 atm = 760 mmHg (exact value)
hggr
hr
A
mg
A
FP
2
2
TemperaturTemperature e
5
Although the temperature is a fundamental physical concept, it is very difficult to define it.
Temperature is the property that indicate us in what direction the heat flows!
The definition of temperature results from the so called “zeroth law of thermodynamicszeroth law of thermodynamics”: if two systems are separately in thermal equilibrium with a third, then they must also be in thermal equilibrium with each other
A, B and C share the same temperature.
6
Boyle´s LawBoyle´s Law
At constant n and T, we obtain
VppV
1or constant
Isothermals of the gas.
7
Charles LawCharles Law
At constant n and p, we obtain
TVLord Kelvin was the first one to recognize the outstanding importance of this Law, giving origin to the absolute scale of temperatures.
15.273/º/ CtKT
Isobaric of the gas
8
Avogadro's LawAvogadro's Law
At constant p and T, we obtain
nV
9
Perfect Gas Equation of StatePerfect Gas Equation of State
Combining the laws of gases we can easily obtain the perfect gas equation of state:
nRTpV Were R is the perfect gas constant. In the SI, R ≈ 8,314 J.K-
1.mol-1 . In non SI units it may be expressed by R ≈ 0,082 atm.L.K-1.mol-1
At STP (standard temperature and pressure), t=0 ºC and p=1 atm, the molar volume of a perfect gas, Vm = V/n is:
-1L.mol 4.22mV
Surface of Possible StatesSurface of Possible States
10
11
pVT surface of an ideal pVT surface of an ideal gasgas
12
Mixtures: Dalton´s Mixtures: Dalton´s LawLawThe pressure exerted by a mixture of perfect gases is the sum of the pressures exerted by the individual gases occupying the same volume
A
A
BA
AA
BA
yP
P
VRTnn
VRTn
P
P
PPP
/
/
Dalton´s Law writes as follow:
PyP AA
Real GasesReal Gases
13
For non-perfect gases there are present intermolecular forces, attractive and repulsive, between atoms and molecules, giving origin to deviations from ideality
A quantitative measure o non-ideality is the compressibity factor, Z:
RT
pVZ m Ideal gas
Z = 1
14
Real Gas (COReal Gas (CO22) pV isotherms) pV isotherms
Experimental isotherms for carbon dioxide
CDE – vapor pressure of CO2 at 20 ºC
The isotherm at 31,04 ºC corresponds to the critical isotherm
* Critical point
In the absence of intermolecular forces there will be no condensate states of matter (solids and liquids)!
15
Virial Equation of StatesVirial Equation of States
At higher temperatures some of the isotherms are similar to the ideal gas. Perfect gas equation can be expanded, in terms of virial equations:
.....12
mm
m
V
C
V
B
RT
pVZ
Leiden form
.....1 2'' pCpBZ Berlin form
B and B’ – 2nd virial coefficientC and C’ – 3rd virial coefficient 2
2
' and 'RT
BCC
RT
BB
16
Virial coefficients: dependence of temperatureVirial coefficients: dependence of temperature
17
van der Waals equationvan der Waals equation
van der Waals corrected the perfect gas equation by assuming that molecules occupy some space, and there are long–range intermolecular forces.
18
Molar volume calculationMolar volume calculation
The VDW equation is cubic in volume, so it gives three roots for the volume in the VLE zone.
023
p
abVp
aV
p
RTbV mmm
Molar volume of liquid
Molar volume of gas
Without physical significance!
19
The critical isothermThe critical isotherm
For the critical isotherm there is an inflexion point. In mathematical terms we have:
02
Cc TmTm V
p
V
p
Solving these equations we have
432
2
32
62
2
mmm
mmm
V
a
bV
RT
V
p
V
a
bV
RT
V
p
Solving altogether we obtain the critical values:
227
27
8 3
b
ap
Rb
aTbV CCC
20
The Principle of Corresponding StatesThe Principle of Corresponding States
If we define now a new set of parameters (reduced parameters):
c
mr
cr
cr V
VV
T
TT
p
pp
Substituting in the VDW equation we obtain:
2
3
13
8
rr
rr VV
Tp
This means that two different gases at the same reduced temperature and reduced volume should exert the same reduced pressure, and they are in corresponding states.
21
Z factor for several gasesZ factor for several gases
22
Equations of stateEquations of state