0% found this document useful (0 votes)
56 views22 pages

SKF3013 Lecture 2

The document discusses the state equation and state functions for gases. It provides the following key points: 1) The state of a gas can be described by variables like amount (n), pressure (P), temperature (T), and volume (V), with the relationship f(P,V,T) = constant for a fixed amount of gas. 2) The internal energy (U) of a gas is a state function that can be expressed as U(P,V,T), and the exact differential dU can be written in terms of partial derivatives with respect to P, V, and T. 3) Experiments by Joule and Joule-Thomson showed that for an

Uploaded by

Ain Sufiza
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
56 views22 pages

SKF3013 Lecture 2

The document discusses the state equation and state functions for gases. It provides the following key points: 1) The state of a gas can be described by variables like amount (n), pressure (P), temperature (T), and volume (V), with the relationship f(P,V,T) = constant for a fixed amount of gas. 2) The internal energy (U) of a gas is a state function that can be expressed as U(P,V,T), and the exact differential dU can be written in terms of partial derivatives with respect to P, V, and T. 3) Experiments by Joule and Joule-Thomson showed that for an

Uploaded by

Ain Sufiza
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 22

State Equation

 State of a gas can be described by its variables: n, P,T, and V.

 For a fix amount of gas (n is fixed), now the variables : P, T


and V. P&V relate to mechanical and T by heat.

 Mathematically : f(P,V,T) = constant

 U is a state function, then U = U(P,V,T)

 3x1023 coordinates to solve the problem. Therefore, we choose


any 2
 
 eg U = U(P,V) fix T U = U(V,T) fix P etc.
F  F ( x , y ), selanjutnya dF ditulis

(1.33)
Ada fungsi keadaan ini [F = F (x,y)] dengan syarat:

 Suppose U = U(P,V) constant T


 
 The Partial differential equation :
 U   U 
dU    dP    dV
 P  V  V  P
 What does it means?

 Take F = F(x,y)
 Then:  F   F 
dF    dx    dy
 x  y  y  x
 F = F(x,y) exists if:
 2F   2F 
    
 xy   yx 
 F is a state function F = F(x,y) and dF is called exact differential

   if 
 2
F    2
F 
 xy   yx  , F ≠ F(x,y), dF is inexact differential
  
   

 Consider dz = M(x,y)dx + N(x,y)dy in the form of


 F   F 
dF    dx    dy
 x  y  y  x
 F   F 
 by comparing M    and N    therefore
 x  y  y  x
 
 M    2F    2F 
   in 
the  of
N form
     
   y x  x  y  xy   yx 
Process at constant Volume ( isochoric)

 Choose U = U(V,T) and dU = dq + dw

 at constant V we get dq V   U  dT then


   T  V
   dq   U 
    
 dT V  T V

 Define :  dq    U   C V
 dT  V  T  V

 where CV called heat capacity at constant V


 
 CV = a + bT + cT2 + …… ( temperature dependence)
 
 CV,m = CV /n called molar heat capacity
4
PROCESS AT CONSTANT PRESSURE
(ISOBARIC)
 Choose U = U(P,T) and first law followed by V = V(P,T)

 we then define:
,heat
dq 
CP    capacity at constant P
   dT  P

 CP = a + bT2 + cT3 + …. temperature dependence

   C P = CP,m =molar heat capacity at P constant


n

5
RELATIONSHIP CP and CV

 For ideal gas:

CP – CV = nR

Monoatomic molecule Cv = 1.5 R


Diatomic molecule Cv = 2.5 R

 For any gas :

  U    V 
C P  Cv   P     
  V T   T  P

6
ENTHALPY (H)

 Define H = U + PV
 
 dH = d(U + PV) and first law
 
 dH = dq + VdP

 at constant P dH = dq
 
 dH   dq 
 therefore       CP
 dT  P  dT  P

 dHP = dqP or

 ΔH = q
 

7
Internal Energy and ideal gas

  Ideal gas fullfil the following conditions

 i) state equation PV = nRT and


 U 
 ii)   0
 V T
JOULE EXPERIMENT

 Joule measured temperature changes


when ideal gas expand adiabatically into a
vacuum.
thermometer

 The result observed that,


 no temperature change valve
Ideal Vacuum
Gas
(2)
 adiabatic : q = constant (1)

dq = 0 therefore q = 0
  insulator
 No work is done, Pext = 0 and dw = 0, w =0 Figure :Joule Experiment

 
 First law dU = dq + dw = 0 + 0 = 0
 Conclusion : w = 0
q =0
ΔU = 0
9
 Consider U = U (V, T):

 U   U 
dU    dV    dT
 V T  T V
 experiment data : dT = 0, dU = 0 therefore
 U 
0  dV
 V  T
 and dV ≠ 0 , therefore
 U 
  0
 V T
 U 
   is called internal pressure
 V  T

10
 U 
   = 0 for ideal gas
 V T
= small for other gas
= large for solid and liquid
U
 Question :    0 ?
 P T

 Results obtained from Joule’s experiment was not


satisfied due to heat capacity of water is very much
larger than gas, hence small change in temperature
difficult to detect.
JOULE-THOMSON EXPERIMENT
 Adiabatic process, q = 0, therefore U = w (First Law of
Thermodynamic)
  T1
Thermometer
T2
 Compartment A: wA = PA VA insulator
 Compartmen B: wB = -PBVB
wtotal = wA + wB
= PAVA + (- PBVB) A
PA
B
PB
 However,
U = UB - UA = wtotal Porous plate
compressed expanded
insulator
UB - UA = PAVA + (- PBVB)
UB + PBVB = UA + PAVA H = U + PV

HB = H A
HB – HA = H = 0
 Process occurs at constant enthalpy. 12
 ΔT detected, means cooling process
occurs during gas expansion. T (K)
 Joule-Thompson coefficient,  can be 700-
measured
600-
 
 T  T
   500-
 P  H P
400-
 During gas expansion, if the sign of  :
cooling heating
 positive – cooling 300-
 negative – heating 200-
 zero – no cooling & heating 100- Critical point
0-| | | | | |
 Temperature during expansion which  = 0
0 10 20 30 40 50
is called the inversion temperature.
P (mPa)
 Application: A gas can be used as a
refrigerant only at temperature below the Isenthalps and inversion temperature for N2
maximum inversion temperature, which is
607 K for N2, 204 K for H2 and 43 K for He.
13
 Using cylic rule:

 H 
 
 T   P  T
  
 P  H  H 
 
 T  P
 H 
 
 P  T

CP
Reversible Adiabatic Process for Ideal Gas

 nRT 
P 
 V 

CV dT nR
  .dV
T V

T2 V2
1 1
Cv 
T1
T
dT   nRV
V
dV
1

T2 V
C v ln   nR ln 2
T1 V1

15
Reversible Adiabatic
nR
Process for Ideal Gas
 1  CP  Cv  nR
CV

(a)  1
T2  V1 
CV CV
V1T1 nR
 V2T2 nR
or    CP
T1  V2  
CV


P1V1  P2V2 P2  V1 
(b) or   
P1  V2 

 1
(c) T1P11 T2P21 T2  P2 
or   
T1  P1 
16
THERMOCHEMISTRY

 Heat effect during chemical and physical change

1. Constant Volume
qV = ΔU ( from first law)

2. Constant Pressure
qP = ΔH ( from dH = dq + VdP)

3. Chemical Reaction

Reactant Product
ΔH
 
ΔH = ΔU + Δ(PV) where
  Δ(PV) = (PV)product – (PV)reactant
17
 Case:

1. All products and reactants in solid or liquid phase, Δ(PV)


very small, hence ΔH ≈ ΔU so qP ≈ qV

2. If gas(gaseous) involved, Δ(PV) depends on the Δng :

Δng = ng(product) – ng(reactant) .

 For ideal gas


Δ(PV) = Δng RT
so
ΔH = ΔU + Δng RT
18
EXAMPLE
The combustion of ethanol in a constant-volume calorimeter produces 1364.34 kJ
mol-1 at 298 K. what is the value of ∆H for the following combustion reaction?

C2H5OH(l) + 3O2(g)  2CO2(g) + 3H2O (l)


 
  ANSWER

∆H = ∆U + RT(∆n)
 
(∆n) = 2 - 3 = -1
 
Thus,
 
∆H = -1364.34 kJ mol-1x (8.314 JK-1mol-1 x 298 K x -1)

= - 1366.82 kJ mol-1

19
HESS’S LAW

 All state functions obey Hess Law (X = U, H, S, G and


A ; all are exact differential).
 The values depend on the final and initial states

20
Heat of Reactions and Temperature

aA + bB mM + nN

 at particular T:

ΔHT = ( ∑HT(product ) - ∑HT(reactant) )

a) for two temperatures, T1 and T2 at constant P:


   H T 
    C P (product)    C P (Re ac tan t ) 
 T  P
 
 integrate limit between T1 and T2 :
  ΔH2 – ΔH1 = ∫ ΔCP dT where
 
ΔH2 at T2 and ΔH1 at T1
  if T1 and T2 not much different, CP assume to be constant, then
  ΔH2 – ΔH1 = ΔCP (T2 – T1)
b) With phase change
 ΔH from A to D ?
 Apply Hess law
 A to B + B to C + C + C to D + D

B C Liquid
P2 D
Solid

P1 A
Gas

T1 Tm T2 T
Phase changes for a component

You might also like