Fundamentals of Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics (MindTap Course List)
Fundamentals of Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics (MindTap Course List)
1st Edition
ISBN: 9781111580704
Author: Kevin D. Dahm, Donald P. Visco
Publisher: Cengage Learning
bartleby

Videos

Question
Book Icon
Chapter 13.13, Problem 24P
Interpretation Introduction

Interpretation:

Does the mixture form a miscibility gap? If so, how does your value is compared with the experimental value at this temperature?

Concept Introduction:

The expression of solubility parameters for methanol (1) and hexane (2) is,

δ1=ΔU_1vapV_1

δ2=ΔU_2vapV_2

Here, molar volume of methanol (1) and hexane (2) is V_1andV_2, change in molar internal energy of vaporization of methanol (1) and hexane (2) is ΔU1vap and ΔU2vap respectively.

The expression of change in molar internal energy of vaporization is,

ΔU_vap=ΔH_vapRT

Here, change in molar enthalpy of vaporization is ΔH_vap, gas constant is R, and temperature is T.

The expression of natural logarithmic activity coefficient of component methanol is,

ln(γ1)=M12(1+M12x1M21x2)2

Here, mole fraction of component methanol is x1 and mole fraction of hexane is x2.

The expression of natural logarithmic activity coefficient of component hexane is,

ln(γ2)=M21(1+M21x2M12x1)2

The phase equilibrium relationship for phase 1 and 2 is,

x1αγ1α=x1βγ1β

(1x1α)γ2α=(1x1β)γ2β

Here, mole fraction of component 1 in phase α is x1α, mole fraction of component 1 in phase β is x1β, activity coefficient for the component 1 in the phase α is γ1β, activity coefficient for the component 2 in the phase α is γ2α, activity coefficient for the component 2 in the phase β is γ2β, and activity coefficient for the component 1 in the phase α is γ1α.

Expert Solution & Answer
Check Mark

Explanation of Solution

Write the expression of solubility parameters for methanol (1) and hexane (2).

δ1=ΔU_1vapV_1        (1)

δ2=ΔU_2vapV_2        (2)

Write the expression of change in molar internal energy of vaporization.

ΔU_vap=ΔH_vapRT        (3)

Rewrite Equations (1) and (2) using Equation (3).

δ1=ΔH_1vapRTV_1        (4)

δ2=ΔH_2vapRTV_2        (5)

Refer Appendix C.1, “Critical point, Enthalpy of phase change, and liquid molar volume”; obtain the following properties at 300 K for methanol (1) and n-hexane (2).

ΔH_1vap=35.21kJmolΔH_2vap=28.85kJmolV_1=40.73cm3molV_2=131.59cm3mol

Substitute 8.314JKmol for R, 300 K for T, 35.21kJmol for ΔH_1vap, and 40.73cm3mol for V_1 in Equation (4).

δ1=35.21kJmol(8.314JKmol)300K40.73cm3mol=35.21kJ×1000JkJmol(8.314JKmol)300K40.73cm3mol=32715.8Jmol40.73cm3mol=803.23Jcm3×Pam31J×(100cm)3m3=28341.42(Pa)0.5

Substitute 8.314JKmol for R, 300 K for T, 28.85kJmol for ΔH_2vap, and 131.59cm3mol for V_2 in Equation (5).

δ2=28.85kJmol(8.314JKmol)300K131.59cm3mol=28.85kJ×1000JkJmol(8.314JKmol)300K131.59cm3mol=200.287Jcm3×Pam31J×(100cm)3m3=14152.3(Pa)0.5

Write the expression of the parameter M12.

M12=V_1RT(δ1δ2)2        (6)

Substitute 8.314JKmol for R, 300 K for T, 28341.42(Pa)0.5 for δ1, 14152.3(Pa)0.5 for δ2, and 40.73cm3mol for V_1 in Equation (6).

M12=40.73cm3mol(8.314JKmol)300K(28341.42(Pa)0.514152.3(Pa)0.5)2=3.288

Write the expression of the parameter M21.

M21=V_2RT(δ1δ2)2        (7)

Substitute 8.314JKmol for R, 300 K for T, 28341.42(Pa)0.5 for δ1, 14152.3(Pa)0.5 for δ2, and 131.59cm3mol for V_2 in Equation (7).

M21=131.59cm3mol(8.314JKmol)300K(28341.42(Pa)0.514152.3(Pa)0.5)2=10.622

Write the expression of natural logarithmic activity coefficient of component methanol.

ln(γ1)=M12(1+M12x1M21x2)2        (8)

Write the expression of natural logarithmic activity coefficient of component hexane.

ln(γ2)=M21(1+M21x2M12x1)2        (9)

Write the phase equilibrium relationship for phase 1 and 2.

x1αγ1α=x1βγ1β

(1x1α)γ2α=(1x1β)γ2β        (10)

Write the expression of the molar Gibbs free energy of mixing.

ΔG_mix=G_E+RT[x1ln(x1)+x2ln(x2)]ΔG_mixRT=G_ERT+[x1ln(x1)+x2ln(x2)]        (11)

If we plot the graph of ΔG_mixRT as a function of x1, we can obtain the double tangency at x1=0.05 and x2=0.99.

By using this approach, obtain the nearest values of x1αandx1β as 0.041 and 0.99997 respectively.

When the SH approach does, a miscibility gap is predicted. That is the gap over a bigger range is experimentally observed. Actually, it predicts an immiscible liquid system.

Want to see more full solutions like this?

Subscribe now to access step-by-step solutions to millions of textbook problems written by subject matter experts!
Students have asked these similar questions
3. Nitric oxide is produced in the body by several different enzymes and acts as a signal that controls blood pressure, long-term memory, and other critical functions. The major route for removing NO from biological fluids is via reaction with O2 to give NO₂ 2NO(g) + O2(g) → 2NO2(g) The following table lists kinetics data for the reaction of NO with O2 at 25°C: Experiment 1 [NO] (M) 0.0235 2 0.0235 3 0.0470 4 0.0470 (a) Determine the rate law for the reaction (b) calculate the rate constant. [02]0 (M) Initial Rate (M/s) 0.0125 7.98 × 10-3 0.0250 15.9 × 10-3 0.0125 32.0 × 10-3 0.0250 63.5 x 10-3 5:32
A closed system of 122 moles of an ideal gas with constant-pressure heat capacity of cp = 2.5R expands isobarically from 52°C and 4.9 bar to 137°C, with a thermodynamic efficiency of 0.74. How much total work is involved in this process? Please report your answer to the nearest whole kJ and don't forget the sign: "-" if the work is negative, no sign if the work is positive.
Liquid toluene at 20°C is reversibly and isothermally compressed from 2.94 bar to 7.7 bar. What is the specific work, in J/kg, required to accomplish this? Some properties of liquid toluene at 20°C: β = 1.05 x 10-3 ºC-1 ,  κ = 8.96 x 10-5 bar-1 , V = 1154 cm3 kg-1. Please report your answer to 3 SF. Be very, very careful of units!
Knowledge Booster
Background pattern image
Chemical Engineering
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, chemical-engineering and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.
Similar questions
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
Recommended textbooks for you
Text book image
Introduction to Chemical Engineering Thermodynami...
Chemical Engineering
ISBN:9781259696527
Author:J.M. Smith Termodinamica en ingenieria quimica, Hendrick C Van Ness, Michael Abbott, Mark Swihart
Publisher:McGraw-Hill Education
Text book image
Elementary Principles of Chemical Processes, Bind...
Chemical Engineering
ISBN:9781118431221
Author:Richard M. Felder, Ronald W. Rousseau, Lisa G. Bullard
Publisher:WILEY
Text book image
Elements of Chemical Reaction Engineering (5th Ed...
Chemical Engineering
ISBN:9780133887518
Author:H. Scott Fogler
Publisher:Prentice Hall
Text book image
Process Dynamics and Control, 4e
Chemical Engineering
ISBN:9781119285915
Author:Seborg
Publisher:WILEY
Text book image
Industrial Plastics: Theory and Applications
Chemical Engineering
ISBN:9781285061238
Author:Lokensgard, Erik
Publisher:Delmar Cengage Learning
Text book image
Unit Operations of Chemical Engineering
Chemical Engineering
ISBN:9780072848236
Author:Warren McCabe, Julian C. Smith, Peter Harriott
Publisher:McGraw-Hill Companies, The
Homogeneous and Heterogeneous Equilibrium - Chemical Equilibrium - Chemistry Class 11; Author: Ekeeda;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8V9ozZSKl9E;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY