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Exercises

1. 10g of CO gas was compressed adiabatically and reversibly from 1 to 20 atm while initially at 0°C. 2. The temperature increased to 642.5K due to the compression. 3. The changes in internal energy (ΔU), enthalpy (ΔH), and entropy (ΔS) were calculated using the ideal gas law and assumptions about heat capacity. 4. However, the change in free energy (ΔG) could not be directly calculated from the given data.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
19 views43 pages

Exercises

1. 10g of CO gas was compressed adiabatically and reversibly from 1 to 20 atm while initially at 0°C. 2. The temperature increased to 642.5K due to the compression. 3. The changes in internal energy (ΔU), enthalpy (ΔH), and entropy (ΔS) were calculated using the ideal gas law and assumptions about heat capacity. 4. However, the change in free energy (ΔG) could not be directly calculated from the given data.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Exercises

Exercise 4

• Calculate the final V2, the final temperature T2 and the work done
when one relaxes suddenly and adiabatically 10 liters of perfect gas,
originally at 0 ° C from 10 to one atmosphere. Cv,m = 5 cal/mol.
Solution
• 10 liters of perfect gas

Adiabatic irreversible expansion V2 = ?


V1 = 10 L T2 = ?
P1 = 10 atm P2 = 1 atm
T = 0°C = 273 K
T
T
Adiabatic expansion Q=0

ΔU = Q + W = W

ΔU for a perfect gas depends only on temperature

dU = Cv dT

𝑇
∆𝑈 = ‫ 𝑇׬‬2 𝐶𝑉 𝑑𝑇 = 𝐶𝑉 (𝑇2 − 𝑇1 ) for one mole
1

for n mole, we should multiply by n

∆𝑈 = 𝑛 𝐶𝑉 (𝑇2 − 𝑇1 )

2
Work = − ‫׬‬1 𝑃𝑑𝑉 = −𝑃2 (𝑉2 − 𝑉1 )
Since sudden and irreversible relaxation, therefore P is the final
pressure P2

𝑛𝑅𝑇2 𝑛𝑅𝑇1 𝑃2
𝑊= −𝑃2 − = 𝑛𝑅 𝑇1 − 𝑇2
𝑃2 𝑃1 𝑃1
So ΔU = W =>

𝑃2
𝑛 𝐶𝑉 𝑇2 − 𝑇1 = 𝑛𝑅 𝑇1 − 𝑇2
𝑃1

𝑃2
𝐶𝑉 𝑇2 + 𝑅𝑇2 = 𝑅𝑇1 + 𝐶𝑉 𝑇1
𝑃1

𝑃2 1
𝑅 + 𝐶𝑉 2× +5 273 × 52
𝑃1 10
𝑇2 = 𝑇1 = 273 × = = 202.8 𝐾
𝐶𝑉 + 𝑅 7 70

System cooling

Expansion  system provides work.


Calculate V2 : we have T2 and P2

𝑛𝑅𝑇2
𝑃2 𝑉2 = 𝑛𝑅𝑇2 => 𝑉2 = =
𝑃2

In the condition (1) :


𝑃1 𝑉1 𝑃1 𝑉1 𝑅𝑇2 𝑇2 𝑃1
𝑃1 𝑉1 = 𝑛𝑅𝑇1 => 𝑛 = d’où 𝑉2 = . = . 𝑉1
𝑅𝑇1 𝑅𝑇1 𝑃2 𝑇1 𝑃2

For the work: 𝑊 = 𝑑𝑈 = 𝑛𝐶𝑉 (𝑇2 − 𝑇1 )

we can write 𝑊 = −𝑃2 (𝑉2 − 𝑉1 )

In both cases we have negative work, the system provides work


Exercise 5

Calculate the maximum flame temperature when 2 moles of H2 are


burned in the theoretical air quantity at 100 ° C and 1 atm. We suppose
that the combustion is complete (∆H = -116012 cal.)
 Cp H2O = 8.22 + 0.15 * 10-3 T + 1.34 * 10-6 T2

 Cp N2 = 6.76 + 0.605 * 10-3 T + 0.13 * 10-6 T2


2H2 + O2  2H2O
This is an exothermic reaction because ΔH < 0

But this quantity is carried by the product, it is the temperature of the


flame

ΔH must be equal - ΔHr = +116012 cal

ΔHr + ΔH = 0 (adiabatic) so ΔH = +116012 cal


𝑇2
ΔH for a physical transformation is : ∆𝐻 = ‫ 𝑇׬‬σ(𝑛𝐶𝑝 )𝑖 𝑑𝑇
1

෍(𝑛𝐶𝑝 )𝑖 = 2𝐶𝑝 𝐻2 𝑂 + 4𝐶𝑝 𝑁2 = 𝐴 + 𝐵𝑇 + 𝐶𝑇 2

𝑇2
Tj > 0 (physical transformation) ∆𝐻 = ‫𝑇׬‬ 𝐴 + 𝐵𝑇 + 𝐶𝑇 2 𝑑𝑇
1

1 1
𝑑𝐻 = 𝐴 𝑇2 − 𝑇1 + 𝐵 𝑇2 − 𝑇1 + 𝐶 𝑇23 − 𝑇13
2 2
2 3

116012 = ⋯
We calculate T2 by successive approximation

First step : we neglect therms in T2 and T3, we obtain :

∆𝐻 = 116012 = 𝐴 𝑇2 − 𝑇1 =>
116012 + 𝐴𝑇1
𝑇2 =
𝐴
First approximated value of T2 = (T2)a
Second step : we replace T2 by the approximated value (T2)a in 𝑇22 and 𝑇23 .
1 1
∆𝐻 = 𝐴 𝑇2 − 𝑇1 + 𝐵 (𝑇2 )2𝑎 −𝑇12 + 𝐶 (𝑇2 )3𝑎 −𝑇13
2 2

We calculate T2
This is a second approximayed value more precise than the first one so we obtain
(T2)b

Third step : we replace (T2)b in 𝑇22 and 𝑇23


Exercise 8
When n-hexane is passed over a chromium catalyst at 500 ° C, benzene
is formed according to the following equation:
C6H14 (g) → C6H6 (g) + 4H2 ∆H°298 = 59.78 kcal/mol
Calculate ∆H°T for the reaction at 500°C.
Cp = a + bT + CT2 Cal/degree mole

Gaz a b.103 c.107

Benzene -0.283 77.936 -262.96

n-hexane 7.313 104.906 -383.97

H2 6.9496 -0.1999 4.808


Solution
∆𝐻𝑇0 =
𝑇
∆𝐻𝑇0 = 0
∆𝐻𝑇1 + ‫ 𝑇׬‬σ(𝑛𝐶𝑝 )𝑖 𝑑𝑇
1

෍ 𝑛𝐶𝑝𝑖 = 4𝐶𝑝 𝐻2 + 𝐶𝑝 𝐶6 𝐻6 − 𝐶𝑝 𝐶6 𝐻14

= 4 6.9496 − 0.1999 × 10−3 𝑇 + 4.8 × 10−7 𝑇 2


+(−0.283) + 77.936 × 10−3 𝑇 + 262.96 × 10−7 𝑇 2
−7.313 − 104.906 × 10−3 𝑇 + 383.97 × 10−7 𝑇 2
𝐴 + 𝐵𝑇 + 𝐶𝑇 2 cal/degre.mol

773
° °
∆𝐻773 = ∆𝐻298 + න 𝐴 + 𝐵𝑇 + 𝐶𝑇 2 𝑑𝑇
298

°
1 1
∆𝐻773 = 59.78 + 𝐴 773 − 298 + 𝐵 773 − 298 + 𝐶 7733 − 2983
2 2
2 3
Exercise 11

Demonstrate that it is impossible for two reversible adiabatic curves on


a P, V diagram to intersect
Solution
We suppose that (1) and (2) intersect at A
We cut the 2 adiabatic by an isobar in B and C

𝛾 𝛾
A and C ϵ to (1) so we can write : 𝑃𝐶 𝑉𝐶 = 𝑃𝐴 𝑉𝐴

𝛾 𝛾 𝛾 𝛾
𝑃𝐵 𝑉𝐵
A and B ϵ to (2) : = 𝑃𝐴 𝑉𝐴 donc : 𝑃𝐶 𝑉𝐶
= 𝑃𝐵 𝑉𝐵
et comme PC =
PB => VC = VB
So it is necessary that B and C are the same points on the two
adiabatics
Exercise 12

One mole of perfect gas is heated at constant pressure from 25 ° C to


300 ° C. Calculate the entropy change ∆S if Cv,m = 3 / 2R.
Solution
3𝑅
P = cte ; 𝐶𝑉 = T = 25°C  200°C
2

𝑑𝑇 𝑑𝑃
Perfect gas 𝑑𝑆 = 𝐶𝑝 − 𝑅
𝑇 𝑃

𝑑𝑇
P = cte => dP = 0 𝑑𝑆 = 𝐶𝑝
𝑇

𝑇2
𝑑𝑇 𝑇2
∆𝑆 = න 𝐶𝑝 = 𝐶𝑝 𝐿𝑛
𝑇 𝑇1
𝑇1
3𝑅 5𝑅
𝐶𝑝 − 𝐶𝑉 = 𝑅 => 𝐶𝑝 = 𝐶𝑉 + 𝑅 = +𝑅 =
2 2
5𝑅 𝑇2 5𝑅 573
∆𝑆 = 𝐿𝑛 = 𝐿𝑛 Unit of ΔS depend on R
2 𝑇1 2 298
Exercise 13

Calculate the increases in U, H, S, F and G when a perfect gas relaxes


isothermally from 1 to 100 dm3 at 25 ° C.
Solution
U, H, S, F, G

Perfect gas :
ΔU = 0 isothermal (U depend on T)
ΔH is only function of T (perfect gas) ΔH = 0
ΔS = ?
𝑑𝑇 𝑑𝑉
𝑑𝑆 = 𝐶𝑉 +𝑅
𝑇 𝑉
𝑑𝑉 𝑉 𝑑𝑉 𝑉2
Isothermal so, 𝑑𝑆 = 𝑅 ∆𝑆 = ‫ 𝑉׬‬2 𝑅 = 𝑅 𝐿𝑛 = 2 𝐿𝑛 100
𝑉 1 𝑉 𝑉1

ΔS = 9.2 cal/K mol

F = U – TS => ΔF = ΔU – TΔS – SΔT


Isothermal : ΔU = 0 and ΔT = 0 => ΔF = – TΔS = -298 (9,2) = 2744,68
calorie/mol

G = H – TS => ΔG = ΔH – TΔS – SΔT


Isotherme : ΔH = 0 et ΔT = 0 => ΔG = – TΔS = -298 (9,2) = 2744,68
calorie/mol
Exercise 14

10 g of carbon monoxide at 0°C are reversibly and adiabatically


compressed from 1 to 20 atm. Calculate ∆U, ∆H, ∆S for this change. It is
assumed that Cv,m = 5 cal / ° C mol and that the perfect gas equation is
valid. Would it be possible to calculate ∆G from the data provided?
Solution
10 g of CO : T1 = 0°C ; P1 = 1 atm ; P2 = 20 atm CV = 5 cal/degre.mol
ΔU ; ΔH ; ΔS

For a perfect gas, ΔU is always f(T)

(1) ΔU = CV (T2 – T1)

Adiabatic transformation (gaz parfait)


1
−1
𝑇. 𝑃 𝛾 = 𝑐𝑡𝑒
1 1 1
−1 −1 𝑃1 (𝛾 −1)
𝛾 𝛾
𝑇1 . 𝑃1 = 𝑇2 . 𝑃2 => 𝑇2 = 𝑇1
𝑃2
𝐶𝑝 𝐶𝑉 +𝑅 7
Or 𝛾 = = =
𝐶𝑉 𝐶𝑉 5

5 2
1 7
−1 1 −7
Alors 𝑇2 = 𝑇1 = 𝑇1 = 642.5 𝐾
20 20

2 2
−7 −7
1 1
∆𝑈 = 𝐶𝑉 𝑇1 −1 = 5 × 273 − 1 = 𝑥𝑥𝑥𝑥𝑥 𝑐𝑎𝑙/𝑚𝑜𝑙
20 20

10 10
The number of mol of CO is 𝑛 = => ∆𝑈 = 𝑥𝑥𝑥𝑥 × = 646.6 𝑐𝑎𝑙
28 28
∆𝑯 𝐶𝑝 7
(2) ΔH = Cp (T2 – T1) => = =
∆𝑼 𝐶𝑉 5

∆𝑯
We compare (1) and (2) and we find
∆𝑼

∆𝑆 = 0 (adiabatic)
𝐺 = 𝐻 − 𝑇𝑆 => ∆𝐺 = ∆𝐻 − 𝑇∆𝑆 − 𝑆∆𝑇
∆𝐺 = ∆𝐻 − 𝑆∆𝑇

we have the values of ΔT and ΔH but we don′ t have that of S.


So we can’t calculate ΔG
Exercise 15
The following data relating to water are:
latent heat of vaporization, 9630 cal / mole;
latent heat of fusion, 1435 cal / mole;

molar specific heats:


 solid, Cp = 0.5 + 0.03T
 liquid, Cp = 18
 steam, Cp = 7.256 + 2.3.10-3 T + 2.83 * 10-7 T2

Calculate ∆S when 1 mole of water is heated from 100°K to 500°K under a


constant pressure of 1 atm.
Solution
ΔHv = 9630 cal/mole
ΔHf = 1435 cal/mole
Cp (solid) = 0.5 + 0.03 T
Cp (liquid) = 18
Cp (vapor) = 7.256 + 2.3 ×10-3 T + 2.83 ×10-7 T2

1 mole of water T1 = 100 K


T2 = 500 K P = cte = 1 atm

Initial state of water (solid) T1 = 100 K


Final state of water (vapor) T2 = 500K
We have : solide – liquid – vapor

Solid water (T1 = 100 K)-----∆𝑆1 ------solid water (273 K) heating


isothermal fusion

Solid water (273 K)-----(∆𝑆2 )------- liquid water (273K)

Liquid water (273K)-----∆𝑆3 --------liquid water (373 K) heating


isothermal vaporization
Liquid water (373 K) ----(∆𝑆4 )-------vapor water (373 K)

Vapor water (373 K) ----(∆𝑆5 )---------vapor water (373 K) heating


∆𝑆 = ∆𝑆1 + ∆𝑆2 + ∆𝑆3 + ∆𝑆4 + ∆𝑆5
273
𝑑𝑇
∆𝑆1 = න 𝐶𝑝
𝑇
100

273
𝑑𝑇 273
= න 0.5 + 0.03 𝑇 = 0.5𝐿𝑛 + 0.03 273 − 100
𝑇 100
100

= 5.69 𝑐𝑎𝑙/𝐾
ΔS2 change of phase at T = cte.

∆𝐻𝑓𝑢𝑠𝑖𝑜𝑛 1435 𝑐𝑎𝑙


∆𝑆2 𝑜𝑓 𝑓𝑢𝑠𝑖𝑜𝑛 = = = 5.25
𝑇𝑓𝑢𝑠𝑖𝑜𝑛 273 𝑚𝑜𝑙

373 373
𝑑𝑇 𝑑𝑇 373
∆𝑆3 = න 𝐶𝑝 𝑙𝑖𝑞𝑢𝑖𝑑 = න 18 × = 18 × 𝐿𝑛 = 5.61 𝑐𝑎𝑙/𝐾
𝑇 𝑇 273
273 273
∆𝐻𝑣𝑎𝑝 9630 𝑐𝑎𝑙
∆𝑆4 = = = 25.81
𝑇𝑣𝑎𝑝 370 𝐾

500

∆𝑆5 = ℎ𝑒𝑎𝑡𝑖𝑛𝑔 𝑜𝑓 𝑣𝑎𝑝𝑜𝑟 = න 𝐶𝑝 𝑜𝑓 𝑣𝑎𝑝𝑜𝑟


500 373
𝑑𝑇
= න (7.256 + 2.3 × 10−3 × 𝑇 + 2.83 × 10−7 × 𝑇2)
𝑇
373

500 1
= 7.256 𝐿𝑛 + 2.3 × 10 500 − 373 + × 2.83 × 10−7 5002 − 3732
−3
373 2

= 2.42 𝑐𝑎𝑙/𝐾
Exercise 19
Demonstrate that for a gas obeying the equation of state:
𝑃 + 𝑎ൗ 2 𝑉 − 𝑏 = 𝑅𝑇
𝑉

we have, for one mole of gas,


(𝜕𝑈/𝜕𝑉) 𝑇 = 𝑎ൗ 2
𝑉
Solution

𝑎 𝜕𝑈
𝑃+ 𝑉 − 𝑏 = 𝑅𝑇 N.B Fo𝑟 𝑎 𝑝𝑒𝑟𝑓𝑒𝑐𝑡 𝑔𝑎𝑠 =0
𝑉2 𝜕𝑉

𝜕𝑈 𝑎 𝜕𝑃 𝜕𝑉
) = ; 𝐿=𝑇 ; 𝑛 = −𝑇
𝜕𝑉 𝑇 𝑉2 𝜕𝑇 𝑉 𝜕𝑇 𝑃

𝑑𝑈 = 𝑑𝑄 + 𝑑𝑊 = 𝑇𝑑𝑆 − 𝑃𝑑𝑉

𝜕𝑈 𝜕𝑆
)𝑇 = 𝑇 −𝑃
𝜕𝑉 𝜕𝑉 𝑇

We know that 𝑑𝐹 = −𝑃𝑑𝑉 − 𝑆𝑑𝑇


We know that 𝑑𝐹 = −𝑃𝑑𝑉 − 𝑆𝑑𝑇

𝜕𝑆 𝜕𝑃
dF is an exact differential : donc on peut écrire : ) = )
𝜕𝑉 𝑇 𝜕𝑇 𝑉

𝝏𝑼 𝝏𝑷
) =𝑻 −𝑷
𝝏𝑽 𝑻 𝝏𝑻 𝑽

𝑅𝑇 𝑎
equation of state : 𝑃 = − 2
(𝑉−𝑏) 𝑉

𝜕𝑃 𝑅
)𝑉 =
𝜕𝑇 𝑉−𝑏
𝜕𝑈 𝑅 𝑇𝑅 𝑅𝑇
So = 𝑇. −𝑃 = −
𝜕𝑉 𝑇 𝑉−𝑏 𝑉−𝑏 𝑉−𝑏
Exercise 21
One mole of perfect gas undergoes the following reversible transformations:
a) Isothermal expansion from the initial state (10 atm, 2 liters) to the final state (5 atm)
b) Adiabatic expansion of this same initial state (10 atm, 2l) to a final state defined by a value
of the pressure equal to 5 atm.
1. Calculate (in cal) the values of Q, W, ∆U and ∆H during previous transformations a and b.
2. In a diagram showing the variations of P as a function of V, plot the paths followed by the gas in
each of these transformations.
3. There is a transformation (c) represented by a straight line in the P, V diagram, which is such
that all the transformations b and c bring the system into the same final state as that obtained
in a. What is the nature of this last process?

Given: Cv = 3 cal / mole


Solution
a) initial : P1 = 10 atm ; V1 = 2L
Isothermal expansion : P2 = 5 atm

Calculate Q ; W ; ΔU ; ΔH
a) Isothermal expansion, 1 mole of perfect gas
Isothermal expansion ΔU = ΔH = 0

𝑉 𝑉2
∆𝑈 = 𝑄 + 𝑊 = 0 => 𝑊 = −𝑄 = ‫ 𝑉׬‬2 −𝑃𝑑𝑉 = −𝑅 𝑇1 𝐿𝑛
1 𝑉1

𝑃1
𝑊 = −𝑄 = −𝑅 𝑇1 𝐿𝑛
𝑃2

𝑃1 𝑉1 𝑃1 𝑉1 10×2
𝑊 = −𝑄 = −2 𝐿𝑛2 𝑇1 = =
𝑅 𝑅 2

𝑊 = −𝑄 = −10 𝑎𝑡𝑚 × 2𝐿 × 0.69 => 𝑊 = −𝑄 = −13.8 𝐿. 𝑎𝑡𝑚

R = 2 cal/mol.K = 0.083 L.atm/mol.K

−13,8
𝑊 = −𝑄 = = −332.5 𝑐𝑎𝑙.
0.0415
b) Adiabatic expansion: Q = 0 ; CV = 3 cal

∆𝑈 = 𝑊 = 𝐶𝑉 (𝑇2 − 𝑇1 )
1 1 1
−1 −1 𝑃1 ( −1)
𝛾 𝛾 𝛾
Or 𝑇1 . 𝑃1 = 𝑇2 . 𝑃2
=> 𝑇2 = 𝑇1
𝑃2
𝐶𝑃 5
𝐶𝑃 = 𝐶𝑉 + 𝑅 = 5 𝑐𝑎𝑙 => 𝛾 = =
𝐶𝑉 3
2

𝑃1 5
𝑇2 = 𝑇1
𝑃2
2

𝑃1 5 𝑃1 𝑉1 −2
∆𝑈 = 𝑊 = 𝐶𝑉 𝑇1 −1 = 𝐶𝑉 25 −1
𝑃2 𝑅

𝑃1 𝑉1 𝑃1 𝑉1
∆𝑈 = 𝐶𝑉 0.75 − 1 = −0.25 𝐶𝑉
𝑅 𝑅
3 −7.5
𝑊 = ∆𝑈 = −0.25 × × 10 × 2 = −7.5 𝐿. 𝑎𝑡𝑚 =
2 0.0415

= −180 𝑐𝑎𝑙
∆𝐻 = 𝐶𝑃 (𝑇2 − 𝑇1 )

∆𝑈 = 𝐶𝑉 (𝑇2 − 𝑇1 )

∆𝐻 5
= 𝛾 => ∆𝐻 = 𝛾. ∆𝑈 = −180 = −300 𝑐𝑎𝑙
∆𝑈 3
2
𝑃1 −5
𝑇2 = 𝑇1 = 𝑇1 (0.75) donc T2 < T1
𝑃2

from the slopes I know the adiabatic curve

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