Evaluating Volumetric and Other Thermodynamic Properties by Means

Dec 12, 2008 - Pressure as a function of volume plot of the ideal (solid line), Van der ... equation of state, for example a cubic equation, is a litt...
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Evaluating Volumetric and Other Thermo­dynamic Properties by Means of Cubic E ­ quations of State by Immaculada Suárez and Baudilio Coto, Department of Chemical and Environmental Technology, ESCET, Rey Juan Carlos University, C/Tulipan, 28933 Móstoles (Madrid), Spain; [email protected] File Names: CubicEquationsOfState.mw and CubicEquationsOfState.pdf Keywords: Audience: Upper Division Undergraduate. Domain: Physical Chemistry. Pedagogy: Computer-Based Learning. Topics: Gases, Mathematics/Symbolic Mathematics, Maple, Thermodynamics. Requires Maple 10

The use of equations of state to evaluate volumetric properties is straightforward for students, at least when the ideal gas equation of state is used. The application of a more complicated equation of state, for example a cubic equation, is a little more difficult, especially for the determination of volume. In addition, the use of such equations to determine some other thermodynamic properties is extremely complex for students both from the numerical and theoretical point of view. The use of Maple to solve involved equations, to manage obtained functions, and to display functional dependencies allows students to obtain required numerical values as well as to understand the meaning of the calculations. This work is related to the evaluation of non idealities from several points of view. The Maple sheet allows stsudents to deter-

Pressure as a function of volume plot of the ideal (solid line), Van der Waals (dashed line), and Soave, Redlich, and Kwong (dotted line) isotherms at 115 K in the volume range 0.03 to 2 L.

mine volumetric properties and compare values obtained from the ideal gas, the Van der Waals (VW), and the Soave (SRK) equations of state. Several aspects of the calculation such as the effect of pressure, the lowest available volume, the number of roots, and the relation between volume and compressibility factor are analyzed. Additional thermodynamic properties are considered. Fugacity coefficient and residual enthalpy are determined from well known thermodynamic relationships and the SRK equation of state. Deviations from ideality are analyzed in terms of all the functions determined.

© Division of Chemical Education  •  www.JCE.DivCHED.org  •  Vol. 85  No. 12  December 2008  •  Journal of Chemical Education

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