ESO 201A: Thermodynamics: Properties of Pure Substances
ESO 201A: Thermodynamics: Properties of Pure Substances
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PHASES OF A PURE The molecules
SUBSTANCE in a solid are
kept at their
positions by the
large springlike
inter-molecular
forces.
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PHASE-CHANGE PROCESSES
OF PURE SUBSTANCES
Compressed liquid (subcooled Saturated liquid: A liquid that
liquid): A substance that it is not is about to vaporize
about to vaporize
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o Saturated vapor: A vapor that is about to condense.
o Saturated liquid–vapor mixture: The state at which the liquid and
vapor phases coexist in equilibrium.
o Superheated vapor: A vapor that is not about to condense (i.e., not a
saturated vapor).
The liquid–vapor
saturation curve
of a pure
substance
(numerical
values are for
water). 8
Latent heat: The amount of energy
absorbed or released during a phase-
change process.
Latent heat of fusion: The amount of
energy absorbed during melting. It is
equivalent to the amount of energy
released during freezing.
Latent heat of vaporization: The amount
of energy absorbed during vaporization
and it is equivalent to the energy released
during condensation.
The magnitudes of the latent heats
depend on the temperature or pressure at
which the phase change occurs.
At 1 atm pressure, the latent heat of
fusion of water is 333.7 kJ/kg and the
latent heat of vaporization is 2256.5 kJ/kg.
The atmospheric pressure, and thus the
boiling temperature of water, decreases
with elevation.
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Some Consequences of
Tsat and Psat Dependence
The variation of
the temperature
of fruits and
vegetables with
pressure during
vacuum cooling
from 25°C to 0°C.
T-v diagram of
constant-pressure
phase-change
processes of a pure
substance at various
pressures
(numerical values
are for water). 11
saturated liquid line
saturated vapor line
compressed liquid region
superheated vapor region
saturated liquid–vapor
mixture region (wet region)
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Phase Diagram
Sublimation:
Passing from the
solid phase directly
into the vapor phase.
At low pressures
(below the triple-point
value), solids
evaporate without
melting first
(sublimation).
P-T diagram of pure substances.
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The P-v-T surfaces present a great deal of information at once, but in a
thermodynamic analysis it is more convenient to work with two-dimensional
diagrams, such as the P-v and T-v diagrams.
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PROPERTY TABLES
• For most substances, the relationships among thermodynamic properties are too
complex to be expressed by simple equations.
• Therefore, properties are frequently presented in the form of tables.
• Some thermodynamic properties can be measured easily, but others cannot and
are calculated by using the relations between them and measurable properties.
• The results of these measurements and calculations are presented in tables in a
convenient format.
Enthalpy—A Combination Property
The
combination
u + Pv is
frequently
encountered
in the analysis
of control
volumes. 16
Saturated Liquid
and Saturated
Vapor States
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Saturated Liquid–Vapor Mixture
Quality, x : The ratio of the mass of vapor to the total mass of the mixture.
Quality is between 0 and 1 0: sat. liquid, 1: sat. vapor.
The properties of the saturated liquid are the same whether it exists alone or in
a mixture with saturated vapor.
Temperature and
pressure are dependent
properties for a mixture.
The relative
amounts of
liquid and
vapor phases
in a saturated
mixture are A two-phase system can be
specified by treated as a homogeneous
the quality x. mixture for convenience. 19
y v, u, or h.
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Examples: Saturated liquid-vapor
mixture states on T-v and P-v diagrams.
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In the region to the right of the Superheated Vapor
saturated vapor line and at
temperatures above the critical Compared to saturated vapor,
point temperature, a substance superheated vapor is characterized by
exists as superheated vapor.
In this region, temperature and
pressure are independent
properties.
At a specified
P, superheated
vapor exists at
a higher h than
the saturated
vapor.
A partial
listing of
Table A–6. 22
The compressed liquid properties Compressed Liquid
depend on temperature much more Compressed liquid is characterized by
strongly than they do on pressure.
y v, u, or h
A compressed liquid
may be approximated
as a saturated liquid at
the given temperature.
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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
properties.
However, those relations give the changes in properties, not the values of
properties at specified states.
Therefore, we need to choose a convenient reference state and assign a
value of zero for a convenient property or properties at that state.
The reference state for water is 0.01°C and for R-134a is -40°C in tables.
Some properties may have negative values as a result of the reference state
chosen.
Sometimes different tables list different values for some properties at the
same state as a result of using a different reference state.
However, In thermodynamics we are concerned with the changes in
properties, and the reference state chosen is of no consequence in
calculations.
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THE IDEAL-GAS EQUATION OF STATE
o Equation of state: Any equation that relates the pressure, temperature,
and specific volume of a substance.
o The simplest and best-known equation of state for substances in the gas
phase is the ideal-gas equation of state. This equation predicts the P-v-T
behavior of a gas quite accurately within some properly selected region.
Ideal gas equation
of state
R: gas constant
M: molar mass (kg/kmol)
Ru: universal gas constant
Ideal gas
equation at two
states for a fixed
mass
Various expressions
of ideal gas equation
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COMPRESSIBILITY FACTOR—A MEASURE
OF DEVIATION FROM IDEAL-GAS BEHAVIOR
Compressibility factor Z The farther away Z is from unity, the more the
A factor that accounts for gas deviates from ideal-gas behavior.
the deviation of real gases Gases behave as an ideal gas at low densities
from ideal-gas behavior at (i.e., low pressure, high temperature).
a given temperature and Question: What is the criteria for low pressure
pressure. and high temperature?
Answer: The pressure or temperature of a gas
is high or low relative to its critical temperature
or pressure.
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Reduced Reduced
pressure temperature
Pseudo-reduced
Z can also be determined from
specific volume
a knowledge of PR and vR.
The constants are given in Table 3–4. This equation can handle substances
at densities up to about 2.5 cr.