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Ch# 2 Properties of Pure Substances

Ch# 2 Properties of Pure Substances. Objectives. Introduce the concept of a pure substance. Discuss the physics of phase-change processes. Illustrate the P - v , T - v , and P - T property diagrams and P - v - T surfaces of pure substances.

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Ch# 2 Properties of Pure Substances

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  1. Ch# 2 Properties of Pure Substances

  2. Objectives • Introduce the concept of a pure substance. • Discuss the physics of phase-change processes. • Illustrate the P-v, T-v, and P-T property diagrams and P-v-T surfaces of pure substances. • Demonstrate the procedures for determining thermodynamic properties of pure substances from tables of property data. • Describe the hypothetical substance “ideal gas” and the ideal-gas equation of state. • Apply the ideal-gas equation of state in the solution of typical problems. • Introduce the compressibility factor, which accounts for the deviation of real gases from ideal-gas behavior. • Present some of the best-known equations of state.

  3. Pure Substance • In Chemistry you defined a pure substance as an element or a compound • Something that can not be separated • In Thermodynamics we’ll define it as something that has a fixed chemical composition throughout Examples of Pure Substance • Water, nitrogen, helium, and carbon dioxide, for example, are all pure substances. • A mixture of water liquid and water vapor, for example, is a pure substance because both phases have the same chemical composition.

  4. Example of Non-Pure Substance • A mixture of liquid air and gaseous air, however, is not a pure substance. • This is because different air components condense at different temperatures at a specified pressures and thus the composition of liquid air and gas air will be different.. Phases of Pure Substance • A phase is identified as having a distinct molecular arrangement. • This molecular arrangement is homogeneous throughout the system. • The phase separated from the other phases by easily identifiable boundary surfaces.

  5. Solid Phase of Pure Substance • The molecules in a solid are arranged in a lattice that is repeated throughout. • Three dimensional pattern • Large attractive forces between atoms or molecules • The atoms or molecules are in constant motion – they oscillate in place • The higher the temperature – the more vibration

  6. Liquid Phase of Pure Substance • When a solid reaches a sufficiently high temperature the velocity (and thus the momentum) of the molecules reach a point where the intermolecular forces are partially defeated and groups of the molecules break away (melting point) • In liquid the molecular spacing is not much different from that of solids, except that they can rotate and translate freely (they are not at fixed positions relative to each other) • Distance between molecules increase slightly as a solid turns to liquid

  7. Gas Phase of Pure Substance • In the gas phase, the molecules are far apart from each other, and a molecular order is nonexistent. • Molecules move about at random, continually colliding with each other and the walls of the container they are in • High kinetic energy • In order to liquefy, lots of that kinetic energy must be released

  8. Liquid phase to Gas Phase • Let us study what would happen when we heat a liquid phase of pure substance at a constant pressure Piston cylinder device – maintains constant pressure Liquid Water

  9. T 5 3 2 4 v Phase Change Processes on a T-v diagram 1

  10. Phase Change Processes on a T-v diagram • Consider a piston-cylinder device with water inside at 20oC and 1 atm pressure . • At this P and T, water is called compressed (or subcooled) liquid state. • Compressed liquid means that it is not about to vaporize. • The system is heated and the piston is allowed to float and thus the pressure will be constant. • T and v will increase until the system reaches 100 C at which any addition of heat will cause some of the liquid to vaporize • The temperature at which a pure substance changes phase is called the saturation temperature, Tsat. • At Tsat, Liquid and vapor phases are in equilibrium. A liquid that is about to vaporize is called Saturated Liquid.

  11. A substance between saturated liquid (state 2) and saturated vapor (state 4) is called saturated liquid-vapor mixture. • Adding more heat will cause boiling to start. Liquid gradually evaporates (state 3) but temperature will remain constant, Why? • The only change is the increase in the specific volume (v) until it reaches state 4 (saturated vapor). • Heating the system further, will increase both the temperature and specific volume (state 5). This single-phase state is called “Superheated vapor” • Repeat this experiment for higher pressures. • Similar curves will be obtained but at higher sat. temperature. • Note that the sat. liquid specific volume (vsat,l ) will increase while the sat. vapor specific volume (vsat,g ) will decrease A vapor that is about to condense is called Saturated vapor.

  12. Saturation Temperature and Pressure • Water at a pressure of 101.325 kPa, Tsat is 100oC. Conversely, at a temperature of 100oC, Psat is 101.325 kPa. • Latent heat: fusion and vaporization. • The magnitude of the latent heats depend on the temperature or pressure at which the phase change occur.

  13. Saturation Temperature and Pressure • At a given pressure, the temperature at which a pure substance changes phase is called the saturation temperature. Likewise the pressure.

  14. Critical Point vsat,land vsat,g will be the same and we speak of Pcrit, Tcrt, and vcrit. • The critical point is defined as the point at which the saturated liquid and saturated vapor states are identical. • At the critical pressure, there will be no distinct phase change process. Instead, the specific volume of the substance will continually increase and at all times there will be only one phase present. • The saturated liquid states can be connected by a line called the saturated liquid line. • The saturated vapor states can be connected by another line, called the saturated vapor line, to form a phase dome. • Three main regions can be identified.

  15. Phase Change Processes on a P-v diagram • Decrease P gradually but keep T constant. • Water boils at Psat • The pressure at which a pure substance changes phase is called the saturation pressure Psat. • At Psat, Liquid and vapor phases are in equilibrium. • From State 2 to 4, no weights are removed (P=constant) and T is kept constant but heating causes liquid to vaporize. 1 2 3 4 5

  16. P-v diagrams with Solid Phase • P – v diagram of substance that contracts on freezing • P – v diagram of substance that expands on freezing (such as water)

  17. Triple point • Under some conditions all three phases of substance coexist in equilibrium at states along the triple line. • The states on the triple line of substance have the same pressure and temperature but different v. • The triple line appears as a point on the P-T diagram. • The triple point of water occurs at T= 0.01 C and P=0.6113 Kpa

  18. Property Diagrams • P-T diagram (or Phase diagram) • The P-T diagram is often called phase diagram since all three phases are separated by three lines, namely the sublimation line (between solid and vapor regions), the vaporization line (between liquid and vapor regions), and the melting line (between solid and liquid).

  19. P-v-T surfaces You can plot P, T, V on a three dimensional graph

  20. Thermodynamics Tables • The relationship among thermodynamic properties are too complex to be expressed in simple equations and thus, properties are measured and/or calculated and then presented in a tabulated form. • In single-phase regions, any two properties will fix the state. • In two phase regions, any two properties (except P and T) will fix the state. P and T are dependent on each other.

  21. Enthalpy − A Combination Property • In the analysis of certain types of processes, particularly in power generation and refrigeration, we frequently encounter the combination of internal energy U, and pressure-volume product PV. That is • Before 1930, h was referred to as heat content or total heat. • After 1930, it is referred to as enthalpy (from the Greek word enthalpien which means to heat)

  22. Saturated Liquid and Saturated Vapor States Table A-4 • Saturated liquid-vapor mixture falls under the P-v (or T-v) dome. • Its properties can be obtained from Water Tables A-4 and A-5

  23. Saturated Liquid and Saturated Vapor States Table A-5 • In Table A-5 (page 832), Pressure is listed in the left column as the independent variable. • Use whichever table is convenient. • Enthalpy of vaporization or latent heat • the amount of energy needed to vaporize a unite mass of saturated liquid at a given temperature or pressure

  24. Example 2-1:Saturated Liquid and Saturated Vapor • A rigid tank contains 50 kg of saturated liquid water at 90oC. Determine the pressure in the tank and the volume of the tank. (Table A-4) (Answers: 70.14 kPa, 0.0518 m) Example 2-2:Saturated Liquid and Saturated Vapor • A piston-cylinder device contains 2 ft3 of saturated water vapor at 50-psia pressure. Determine the temperature of the vapor and the mass of the vapor inside the cylinder. (Table A-5E) (Answers: 281.03oF, 0.235 lbm)

  25. Example 2-3:Saturated Liquid and Saturated Vapor • A mass of 200 g of saturated liquid water is completely vaporized at a constant pressure of 100 kPa. Determine (a) the volume change and (b) the amount of energy added to the water. (Answers: 0.3368 m3, 451.6 kJ)

  26. Saturated Liquid-Vapor Mixture • In the saturated liquid-vapor mixture, the mass fraction of vapor is called the QUALITY (x) and is expresses as • Derivation:

  27. Average Properties • In the saturated mixture region, the average value of any intensive property y is given as: • where f stands for saturated liquid and g for saturated vapor. For example:

  28. 0 1 = yg When x = 0 we have all liquid, and y = yf When x = 1 we have all gas, and y = yf + yfg = yg Average Properties In the saturated mixture region, the average value of any intensive property y is given as: where f stands for saturated liquid and g for saturated vapor. For example: The average properties of the mixtures are always between the values of the saturated liquid and the saturated vapor properties. That is

  29. X = 0 X = 1

  30. Saturated Liquid-Vapor Mixture Quality is an intensive property

  31. Example 2- 4:Saturated Liquid-vapor mixture (continued) • A rigid tank contains 10 kg of water at 90oC. If 8 kg of water is in the liquid form and the rest is in the vapor form, determine (a) the pressure in the tank and (b) the volume of the tank. (Answers: 70.14 kPa, 4.73 m3)

  32. Example 2-5:Saturated Liquid-vapor mixture (continued) • An 80-L vessel contains 4 kg of refrigerant 134a at a pressure of 160 kPa. Determine a) the temperature of the refrigerant, b) the quality, c) the enthalpy of the refrigerant, and d) the volume occupied by the vapor phase. (Answers: -15.62oC, 0.158, 62.7 kJ/kg, 0.0777 m3)

  33. Superheated Vapor Table A-6 • In the region to the right of the saturated vapor line, a substance exists as superheated vapor (single phase).

  34. Superheated Vapor

  35. Compressed liquid Table A-7 • In the region to the left of the saturated liquid line, a substance exists as compressed liquid.

  36. Compressed Liquid

  37. A general approximation • In the absence of compressed liquid data, a general approximation is to treat compressed liquid as saturated liquid at the given temperature. Such that • If the compression is moderate, the properties do not vary significantly with pressure. But they do vary with temperature

  38. Linear Interpolation 130 y

  39. Linear Interpolation (Continued) Now T Psat X1= 140 y1= 0.3615 X = 143 y = ? X2= 145 y2= 0.4154

  40. Example 2-7Superheated Vapor • Determine the temperature of water at a state of P = 0.5 MPa and h = 2890 kJ/kg. (Answers: 216.4 oC)

  41. Example on Compressed Liquid Example 2-8: • Determine the internal energy of compressed liquid water at 80oC and 5 MPa using (a) data from the compressed liquid table and (b) saturated liquid data. What is the error involved in the second case? (Answers: 333.72 kJ/kg, 334.86 kJ/kg, 0.34%)

  42. The Use of Steam Table to Determine Properties Example 2-9: • Determine the missing properties and the phase descriptions in the following table for water.

  43. Reference State and Reference Values • The values of u, h, and s cannot be measured directly, and they are calculated from measurable properties using the relations between thermodynamic properties. However, those relations give the changes in properties, not the values of properties at specified state. • For water, the state saturated liquid at 0.01oC is taken as the reference state, and the internal energy and entropy are assigned zero values at that sate. • For refrigerant 134a, the state saturated liquid at -40oC is taken as the reference state, and the enthalpy and entropy are assigned zero values at that state. • In thermodynamics we are concerned with the changes in properties, and the reference chosen has no consequences in the calculations.

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