Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics II Dr. Perla B. Balbuena: JEB 240 Web site: https://secure.che.tamu.edu/classes/balbuena/CHEN%20.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Department of Mechanical Engineering ME 322 – Mechanical Engineering Thermodynamics Lecture 32 Ideal Gas Mixtures II.
Advertisements

Chapter 4 FUGACITY.
For a closed system consists of n moles, eq. (1.14) becomes: (2.1) This equation may be applied to a single-phase fluid in a closed system wherein no.
Solution thermodynamics theory—Part I
Chapter 16 Chemical and Phase Equilibrium Study Guide in PowerPoint to accompany Thermodynamics: An Engineering Approach, 5th edition by Yunus.
Chapter 12 Gas-Liquid Equilibrium
Advanced Thermodynamics Note 5 Thermodynamic Properties of Fluids
Chapter 14-Part VII Applications of VLLE.
Chapter 14: Phase Equilibria Applications
MSEG 803 Equilibria in Material Systems 4: Formal Structure of TD Prof. Juejun (JJ) Hu
ES 202 Fluid and Thermal Systems Lecture 18: Making the Connection (1/23/2003)
1 CHEM 212 Chapter 5 Phases and Solutions Dr. A. Al-Saadi.
The Advanced Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics The variables (thermodynamic properties) and the equations in thermodynamics Q&A -2- 9/22/2005(2) Ji-Sheng.
Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics II
Now we introduce a new concept: fugacity
Thermo & Stat Mech - Spring 2006 Class 9 1 Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics Change of Phase.
Igneous Petrology Course Lecturer: Matt Genge, Meteorite Researcher, Previously worked at The Natural History Museum. Lectures: Part I (4 weeks) Igneous.
Spontaneity and Equilibrium in Chemical Systems
Ch. 9 K&K: Gibbs Free Energy and Chemical Reactions Recall (ch. 8): Free energyconditions. Helmholtz F isothermal Enthalpy H constant pressure Gibbs G.
Chemical Thermodynamics II Phase Equilibria
Thermodynamics Basic Review of Byeong-Joo Lee Microstructure Evolution
Physical Chemistry content Physical Chemistry 1 (BSC) Thermodynamics Terms The thermodynamic system First law of thermodynamics Work, heat, internal energy,
The Thermodynamic Potentials Four Fundamental Thermodynamic Potentials dU = TdS - pdV dH = TdS + Vdp dG = Vdp - SdT dA = -pdV - SdT The appropriate thermodynamic.
Physical Chemistry I (TKK-2246) 14/15 Semester 2 Instructor: Rama Oktavian Office Hr.: M – F
ERT 108 Physical Chemistry The First Law of Thermodynamics by Miss Anis Atikah binti Ahmad
1 The Second Law of Thermodynamics (II). 2 The Fundamental Equation We have shown that: dU = dq + dw plus dw rev = -pdV and dq rev = TdS We may write:
Physical Chemistry I (TKK-2246) 14/15 Semester 2 Instructor: Rama Oktavian Office Hr.: M – F
1. (1.3) (1.8) (1.11) (1.14) Fundamental equations for homogeneous closed system consisting of 1 mole:
The Simplest Phase Equilibrium Examples and Some Simple Estimating Rules Chapter 3.
Partial Molar Quantities and the Chemical Potential Lecture 6.
Chapter 10, Section 4  Changes of State. Phase  Any part of a system that has uniform composition and properties.
Solution thermodynamics theory—Part I
6. Coping with Non-Ideality SVNA 10.3
Lecture 6. NONELECTROLYTE SOLUTONS. NONELECTROLYTE SOLUTIONS SOLUTIONS – single phase homogeneous mixture of two or more components NONELECTROLYTES –
Chapter 8: The Thermodynamics of Multicomponent Mixtures
Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics II Perla B. Balbuena 240 JEB
CHEE 311J.S. Parent1 4. Chemical Potential in Mixtures When we add dn moles of a component to n moles of itself, we will observe (?) a change in Gibbs.
Chemical Equilibrium By Doba Jackson, Ph.D.. Outline of Chpt 5 Gibbs Energy and Helmholtz Energy Gibbs energy of a reaction mixture (Chemical Potential)
ACTIVITY AND ACTIVITY COEFFICIENT
Chapter 14 Part III- Equilibrium and Stability. A system with n components and m phases Initially in a non-equilibrium state (mass transfer and chemical.
Topic 4 The thermodynamics of mixtures
Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics II
Introduction to phase equilibrium
Solution thermodynamics theory
Thermodynamics and the Phase Rule
SOLUTION THERMODYNAMICS:
Classical Thermodynamics of Solutions
Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics II Dr. Perla B. Balbuena: JEB 240 Website:
MS811Material Thermodynamics (3 Credit Hours Course) Prof. Nasir Ahmad Lecture 6-Mostly Revision for Exam: Wednesday, 25 November 2009 Lecture 7-Carnot.
Chapter 14: Phase Equilibria Applications Part II.
Solution thermodynamics theory—Part III
Shroff S.R. Rotary Institute of Chemical Technology Chemical Engineering Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics-II 1.
공정 열역학 Chapter 2. The First Law and Other Basic Concepts 고려대학교 화공생명공학과 강정원.
Exam #3 1. You should know from memory:
Solution of Thermodynamics: Theory and applications
Fundamental Property Relation,The Chemical
Chapter 13 Macromolecules in Solution: Thermodynamics and Equilibria
} C = 1 F = 2 P = 1 Gibbs phase rule F = C – P + 2
Classical Thermodynamics of Multicomponent Systems
Classical description of a single component system
THERMODYNAMIC PROPERTIES OF FLUIDS
Don’t be in a such a hurry to condemn a person because he doesn’t do what you do, or think as you think. There was a time when you didn’t know what you.
Chapter 4 Revision.
Chapter 12 Gas-Liquid Equilibrium
Chem. Eng. Thermodynamics (TKK-2137)
Phase diagrams and phase transitions of unary systems
Chapter 3: Evaluating Properties
Chemical Equilibrium Mass transfer takes place from higher chemical potential to lower chemical potential. If the chemical potential of reactants are.
Presentation transcript:

Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics II Dr. Perla B. Balbuena: JEB 240 Web site: Thermo%20II-Spring%2012/CHEN% Thermo%20II-Spring%2012.htm Thermo%20II-Spring%2012/CHEN% Thermo%20II-Spring%2012.htm or: mhttp://research.che.tamu.edu/groups/balbuena/courses.ht m (use VPN from home)  CHEN 354-Spring 12 TA: Mian Huang;

TA office hours Thursdays 1:30 to 2:30 pm; Rm 501 Or by appointment, please to Mian Huang:

TEAMS Please group in teams of 4-5 students each Designate a team coordinator Team coordinator: Please send me an stating the names of all the students in your team (including yourself) no later than next Monday First HW is due January 26 th

Introduction to phase equilibrium Chapter 10 (but also revision from Chapter 6)

Equilibrium Absence of change Absence of a driving force for change Example of driving forces –Imbalance of mechanical forces => work (energy transfer) –Temperature differences => heat transfer –Differences in chemical potential => mass transfer

Energies Internal energy, U Enthalpy H = U + PV Gibbs free energy G = H – TS Helmholtz free energy A = U - TS

Phase Diagram Pure Component a d c b e  What happens from (a) to (f) as volume is compressed at constant T. f

P-T for pure component

P-V diagrams pure component

Equilibrium condition for coexistence of two phases (pure component) Review Section 6.4 At a phase transition, molar or specific values of extensive thermodynamic properties change abruptly. The exception is the molar Gibbs free energy, G, that for a pure species does not change at a phase transition

Equilibrium condition for coexistence of two phases (pure component, closed system) d(nG) = (nV) dP –(nS) dT Pure liquid in equilibrium with its vapor, if a differential amount of liquid evaporates at constant T and P, then d(nG) = 0 n = constant => ndG =0 => dG =0 G l = G v Equality of the molar or specific Gibbs free energies (chemical potentials) of each phase

Chemical potential in a mixture : Single-phase, open system:  i :Chemical potential of component i in the mixture

Phase equilibrium: 2-phases and n components Two phases, a and b and n components: Equilibrium conditions:  i a =  i b (for i = 1, 2, 3,….n) T a = T b P a = P b

A liquid at temperature T The more energetic particles escape A liquid at temperature T in a closed container Vapor pressure

Fugacity of 1 = f 1 Fugacity of 2 = f 2

For a pure component   =   For a pure component, fugacity is a function of T and P

For a mixture of n components  i  =  i  for all i =1, 2, 3, …n in a mixture: Fugacity is a function of composition, T and P

Lets recall Raoult’s law for a binary We need models for the fugacity in the vapor phase and in the liquid phase

Raoult’s law

Model the vapor phase as a mixture of ideal gases: Model the liquid phase as an ideal solution

VLE according to Raoult’s law:

Homework # 1 download from web site Due Wednesday, January 25 th, at the beginning of the class