Module 1. Vapor - Liquid Equilibrium
Module 1. Vapor - Liquid Equilibrium
MODULE 1
Content
I. Nature of Equilibrium
II. Phase Rule
III. Gibbs-Duhem Equation
IV. Criteria for Phase Equilibrium in Pure Systems
V. Criterial for Phase Equilibrium in Multicomponent
Systems
VI. Equilibrium and Stability
Raw I. Preparation II. Reaction
Materials Phase Phase
Undesired
III. Purification Side
reactants
Phase Products
Unreacted
reactants Products
As Simple
• Defined by 2 independent variable and intensive
thermodynamic properties
Properties and State
Properties:
Descriptive characteristics that
express the behavior of the system
• Intensive Properties – independent of mass (T, P, )
• Extensive Properties – depends on mass (VT, UT)
• Specific Properties – those of a unit mass (sp.vol.)
T
Vapor pressure curve of a pure substance
Saturated Liquid and Saturated Vapor States
Critical
P point
Saturated
liquid line Saturated
vapor
Vfg Line
Vf Vg V
Vf = specific volume of saturated liquid
Vg = specific volume of saturated vapor
Vfg = difference between Vf and Vg (Vfg = Vg Vf)
Steam Tables
◦ Vehicle for representing thermodynamic tables.
◦ Steam is used extensively in power plants and
industrial processes.
V
The calculation of the properties of a saturated
mixture involves the quality, x.
Superheated Vapor
T
Saturated
vapor P Superheated Superheat region
line vapor is a single-phase
region (vapor
phase only)
T and P are
H independent
Hg H >H
p g
Given: P and T
V Vf @ T H Hf @ T U Uf @ T
P Critical
C point
Compressed Superheated
Liquid Region vapor region
Saturated
A liquid-vapor
region B
V
Curve AC – saturated liquid line
Curve BC – saturated vapor line
Critical
P point
Liquid
Solid + Liquid
Evaporation
Vapor
Solid
Liquid + Vapor
Sublimation
Solid + Vapor
V
P-V diagram of a substance that contracts on freezing.
Solid + Liquid
P Critical
point
Liquid
Evaporation
Vapor
Solid
Liquid + Vapor
V
V a-b : compressed liquid
Saturated Saturated
b-d : saturated mixture
liquid vapor d-e : superheated vapor
T-V Diagram
• The T-V diagram contains three single phase regions (liquid,
vapor, supercritical fluid), a two-phase (liquid+vapor) region,
and two important curves - the saturated liquid and saturated
vapor curves. The number of regions and curves will
increase when we consider solids.
• The saturated liquid and vapor curves meet at the critical
point, which represents the highest temperature and pressure
in which vapor and liquid phases can coexist.
• The single phase liquid region is also called subcooled liquid
because, at a given pressure, temperature will be below the
boiling temperature.
• The single phase vapor region is also called superheated
vapor because, at a given pressure, temperature will always
be above the boiling temperature.
P-T Diagram
Substances Substances
that expand that contract
P
on freezing on freezing
Melting Critical
point
LIQUID
SOLID Vaporization
VAPOR
Triple
Sublimation point
T
P-T Diagram
• The triple line connects a solid, liquid and vapor state that coexist at the same
temperature and pressure. For a pure substance there will be only one such
line on the PVT surface.
• On the PT projection, two-phase regions collapse to curves.
• There is a one-to-one relationship between pressure and temperature in two-
phase regions. In the solid-vapor region, the temperature at a given pressure is
called the sublimation temperature. In the solid-liquid region it is called the
melting temperature.
• The vapor pressure curve, melting curve, and sublimation curve give the
one-to-one relationship between pressure and temperature in the vapor-liquid,
solid-liquid and solid-vapor regions respectively.
• In the vapor-liquid region at a particular pressure, the temperature is called the
boiling temperature. At a particular temperature, the pressure is called the
vapor pressure.
P-V-T Diagram
Critical
Solid-Liquid
point
Liquid
P Solid
Liquid-
Vapor
V
T
Substance that contracts on freezing.
Critical
point
Liquid
P Solid
Solid-Vapor
V
T
Substance that expands on freezing.
OTHER THERMODYNAMIC
RELATIONS
Real Gas Behavior
&
Equations of State
Equations of State : property relations that
involve other properties of a
substance at equilibrium states.
•◦ Ideal
IdealGasGas Equation
Equation of State of State – simplest and
◦ Compressibility Factor of state for substances in the gas
best known equation
•◦ Virial
Compressibility
phase; Factorof –a gas
predicts PVT behavior
Equations a correction factor
quite accurately
within
that some
can PROPERLY
accurately SELECTED
account REGIONS.
for the deviation from ideal
•◦ Cubic
Virial Equations
Equations of State
gas behavior at a given T and P
• Cubic Equations of State
– Equations of state that◦ represent the PVT behavior
Van der Waals
of substances accurately over a larger region with
◦ Beattie Bridgemann
no limitations. ◦ Benedict-Webb-Rubin
◦ Redlick-Kwong
◦ Soave-Redlick-Kwong
◦ Peng-Robinson
◦ Etc.
Gas and Vapor
Vapor phase – can be condensed either by
compression at constant
temperature or by cooling at
constant pressure
Gas phase – can be condensed by the reduction of
temperature and pressure
Gas – term referred when above the critical
temperature
Vapor – a gas which is not far from a state of
condensation.
Ideal gas - An imaginary substance that
obeys PV = nRT
P T
Dense gases
Should not be treated as ideal gases
• Property tables must be used.
* Ex.:
GasesWaterdeviate
Vapor from ideal gas behavior
- air conditioning: as ideal gas (P too low)
significantly at states near the saturation
- steam power plant: as real gas (P too high)
region and the critical point.
Compressibility Factor, Z
PV
Z or PV = ZRT
RT
V RT
Z actual where Videal
Videal P
For Ideal Pressure and
100C is agases: Z=1
low temperature for most substances,
but Real
not for gases: <
air. Z 1 (Z > 1)
Temperature of a
substance are high or low
-N2 is well over its Tc = 147C and away from
Gases behave relative to its Tc or Pc
saturation regiondifferently
at a given T and P. But
they are normalized with P T
respect to their Tc and Pc
Pr Tr
P c cT
The deviation of Z from unity is a
measure of the deviation of the actual
relation from the ideal gas equation of
state.
Volume Expansibility 1 V
V T P
Isothermal Compressibility 1 V
V P T
V V
dV dT dP
T P P T
dV
dT dP
V
incompressible
fluids
P C
=0
Liquid
=0 T > Tc
suggests Vapor
idealization Tc
T1 < Tc
liquid-vapor
A
B T2 < Tc
V
P-V diagram of a pure substance showing the isotherms.
ln T2 T1 P2 P1
V2
V1
When P & V and T & V are given instead of P & T, the generalized
compressibility chart can still be used to determine the 3rd property.
Z
B ' 2C ' P 3 D ' P 2
...
P T
From which Z
B'
P T ; P 0
Equation of tangent line: B
Z 1 B' P B'
RT
PV B
Z 1
RT V
B PV BP
Z 1 B' P B' Z 1 RT PV
RT RT RT
PV B BP B
Z 1 Z 1 1
RT V
PV V
PV B - represents PVT behavior of many vapors at
Z 1
RT V subcritical temperatures up to a P of about 5 bar
a
P 2 V b RT
V
In a room at atmospheric T & P, the V occupied by molecules
is 1/1000 of the room.
V
3 RTc 27 R 2Tc2 RTc PcVc 3
Vc a b Zc
8 Pc 64 Pc 8Pc RTc 8
Refer to Table B.1.
Properties of Pure Species on pp. 680-681.
Beattie – Bridgeman Equation of State
(1928) : based on 5 experimentally
determined constants.
RnT C A
P 2 1 3 V B 2
V VT V
where: * Accurate for
a densities up to
A Ao 1
V 0.8c
where
b
B Bo 1 c : density of
V substance at
critical point
Benedict-Webb-Rubin Equation of State
(1940) – extension of Beattie – Bridgeman
by raising constants to 8
• Can handle densities of up to about 2.5 c
• Strobridge further extended this equation by
raising the no. of constants to 16
RT C 1 bR T a
p Bo RuT Ao o2 2 u 3
V T V V
a c 2
6
3 2
1 2
V
e
V V T V
Ao,. Bo, Co, a, b, c, , , & all constants for
a given liquid
Redlich / Kwong Equation
RT a(T )
P
V b V (V b)
Z 1 q
Z q
a(T )
Z Z bRT
Liquid & Liquid-Like Roots of
the Generic Equation of State
RT bP VP
V b V b V b
a(T )
1 Z
Z Z Z B
q
bP (T r )
q
RT Tr
a(T ) or
q pr
bRT
Tr
Theorem of Corresponding States
Acentric Factor,
Two-Parameter Correlations:
- All fluids that are compared at the same Tr and Pr have
approximately the same compressibility factor and all
deviate from ideal-gas behavior to about the same degree.
Three-Parameter Correlations:
- All fluids having the same value of , when compared at the
same Tr and Pr, have about the same value of Z, and all
deviate from ideal gas behavior to about the same degree.
0.42748
0.08664 (Tr ) 1/ 2
1 q
Tr
1 3 / 2
Zc T 0.42748 (0.8233) 3 / 2
3 q r 6.6048
0.08664
Pr 0.2491
0.08664 0.026214
Tr 0.8233
Z
(a) Vg (satd vapor) Z 1 q
Z Z
Since 0
Z Solve by iteration taking
Z 1 q
Z Z Z = 1 initially
1 0.026214
Z 1 0.026214 (6.6048) 0.026214
1 1 (1 0.026214)
Z 0.8619
0.422 0.172
B 0 0.083 1.6
B' 0.139
Tr Tr4.2
Pr P
Z 1 B0 B r
Tr Tr
0.659
Z 1 (0.220)
1.2
Z 0.8792
ZRT (0.8792)(83.14)(510)
V
P 25
V 1491.14 cm3/mol
Generalized Correlations for Liquids
Rackett Equation: for estimation of molar
volumes of saturated liquids
2
(1Tr ) 7
V sat
Vc Z c Table B.1 for
critical constants
Pr 1 1Tr 2 7
Z sat
Zc
Tr
Generalized Correlations for Liquids
Lydersen, Greenkorn, and Hougen: two-
parameter corresponding-states correlation for
liquid volume estimation
Vc r
r V2 V1 1
c V r 2
Tr
r 3.5
3.0
2.5
saturated
liquid
0 10
Pr
Content
I. Nature of Equilibrium
II. Phase Rule
III. Gibbs-Duhem Equation
IV. Criteria for Phase Equilibrium in Pure Systems
V. Criterial for Phase Equilibrium in Multicomponent
Systems
VI. Equilibrium and Stability
Realizations
Most of the materials are not pure substances with all
atoms or molecules identical mixtures of one type or
another
Pure substances from which solutions are prepared are
called components, or constituents, of the solution.
Solutions are not limited to liquids.
i.e. air – mixture of N2 and O2 ; solid solutions – Si-Ge system
Basic Relations
I. Single Component System
Intensive properties: depends on P and T
Extensive Properties: depends on P, T, and amount
I. Multi-component System
Intensive properties: depends on P, T and composition
Extensive Properties: depends on P, T, and amount of
each component
Properties of Solutions
The properties of solutions, in general, are not additive properties of the pure
components
The actual contribution to any extensive property is designated as its partial
property used to designate the property of a component when it is in
admixture with one or more components
Partial molar properties: partial derivatives of all thermodynamic properties
with respect to mole number/s at constant P and T
– Since most chemical, biological and geological processes occur at constant T & P.
Most Common Measures of Composition
• Molar Concentration
= 76 mL
Water:
18 mL/mol Solution Solution Infinitely
@ xE = 0.3 @ xE = 0.1 dilute
solution
Ethanol: @ 54 mL/mole, Pure
Ethanol behaves as
58 mL/mol infinitely dilute
Water:
18 mL/mol Solution Solution Infinitely
@ xE = 0.3 @ xE = 0.1 dilute
solution
The Phase Rule
• Applicable only to systems in equilibrium
• Gibb’s phase rule
F = 2 + N = 2 + (N 1)
2 + (N 1) + = 2 + N
( 1) N + N = N
Difference between the no. of variables & the number of equations:
Duhem’s Theorem
For any closed system formed initially from given masses (or moles) of
prescribed chemical species, the equilibrium state is completely
determined when any two independent variables are fixed
By definition:
partial molar Enthalpy
, ,
partial molar Entropy
chemical potential
For partial molar entropy:
, , ,
Therefore,
, , ,
(T,P) P
Analogous statement:
P
For Multicomponents:
Binary System: G(T,P,n1,n2) = µ1n1 + µ2n2 @ P = 0; T = 0
• Starting with the system in this state, we can make changes that place the
system in a new equilibrium state having the same kinds of phases and the
same species, but different values of some of the intensive properties.
• The system remains in equilibrium if the amount of a phase is changed
without changing its T, P, or composition. the change of an extensive
variable and not counted as a degree of freedom.
Criteria for Phase Equilibrium in Multicomponent Systems