C 3
C 3
C 3
Chapter 3
Properties of Pure Substances
3.1
Pure Substance
Pure substance = a substance with fixed chemical composition throughout (e.g. water, nitrogen)
3.2
Consider a piston-cylinder device which contains water at 20 oC and 1 atm (state 1). The water exists
in the liquid phase and it is called : compressed liquid or subcooled liquid. As heat is transferred to
the water, its temperature rises, the liquid expands slightly (specific volume increases) and the piston
rises. As more heat is transferred, the temperature keeps rising to 100 oC, where the liquid starts to
vaporize (boil). A liquid that is about to vaporize is called a saturated liquid state 2.
Once boiling starts, with heat addition the temperature remains constant (at constant pressure) and the
volume increases. At state 3 the cylinder is filled with a mixture of liquid and vapor. Further heat
addition converts more liquid to vapor and at state 4, all liquid is converted to vapor. At state 4, any
heat loss causes some of the vapor to condense (phase change from vapor to liquid). Thus, state 4 is a
saturated vapor state.
A substance at states between 2 and 4 is called saturated liquid-vapor mixture a two phase region.
From state 4, further heat addition increases the temperature and the volume. Beyond state 4, the vapor
is called superheated vapor.
The experiment can be repeated with different pressures inside the cylinder, by varying the mass of the
piston since,
2
P Patm
mg
A
T
( C)
o
P = 1 atm
300
5
saturated liquid
superheated vapor
100
saturated
mixture
compressed
liquid
saturated vapor
20
v = V/m
1
.
.
bubbles formed
onset of boiling
heating process
A complete T-v diagram is obtained by performing the experiment at different pressures.
T, oC
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
critical point
constant pressure lines
saturated liquid line
compressed liquid
or subcooled
liquid
region
P2 > P1
superheated
vapor region
P1
saturated liquid-vapor region
or
wet region
saturated vapor line
3
Critical Point = point at which the saturated liquid and saturated vapor states are identical.
For water at critical point:
Critical temperature Tcr = 373.95 oC
Critical pressure Pcr = 22.06 MPa
Critical specific volume vcr = 0.003106 m3/kg
At pressures above the critical pressure, there is no distinct phase-change process, and at all times there
is only one phase present. The point where liquid becomes vapor is not precisely known. Above the
critical state, it is referred to as superheated vapor at T > Tcr and as compressed liquid at T < Tcr .
3.3.2
Consider a piston-cylinder device that contains liquid water at 1 MPa and 150 oC (compressed liquid
state). Removing some weights on top the piston, the pressure inside the cylinder is reduced, the
volume is increased slightly. The water exchanges heat with the surroundings such that its temperature
remains constant. With more weight reduction, the water boils at the saturation-pressure of 0.4762
MPa at 150 oC. When boiling starts, further addition of heat and without removing any more weights,
the volume increases further but the temperature remains constant a constant pressure phase-change
process. At state 4, the last liquid has vaporized (saturated vapor state), and further weight removal
with some heat addition increases the volume and reduces the pressure in the superheated vapor
region.
P
MPa
1
150 oC
1
compressed
liquid
saturated vapor
0.4762
saturated
mixture
saturated liquid
superheated
vapor
5
v = V/m
1
.
.
bubbles formed
onset of boiling
heating process
4
A complete P-v diagram is obtained by performing the experiment at different temperatures
P, MPa
critical point
.
.
.
.
.
superheated
vapor region
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
compressed or
subcooled liquid
region
T2 > T1
constant T lines
T1
Saturation temperature Tsat = temperature at which a pure substance changes phase, at a given
pressure.
Saturation pressure Psat = the pressure at which a pure substance changes phase, at a given
temperature.
3.3.3
The P-T diagram is often called the phase diagram since all three principal phases are separated from
each other by three line.
.
Critical point
.
LIQUID
Melting
Vaporization
SOLID
Triple point
VAPOR
Sublimation
T
Triple point = all three phases coexist in equilibrium
5
The P-v-T Surface
The P-v-T surfaces provide a great deal of information at a glance. In thermodynamics it is more
convenient to work with 2-dimensional diagrams, such as the P-v and T-v diagrams. (consult textbook
on P-v-T diagram).
3.4 Property Tables
Thermodynamic properties are usually presented in the form of tables, which can be used easily when
doing manual calculations.
3.4.1
Properties of saturated liquid and saturated vapor for water are listed in Tables A-4 and A-5.
subscript f denotes properties of saturated liquid
subscript g denotes properties of saturated vapor
subscript fg denotes difference between saturated vapor and saturated liquid values
For example,
vf = specific volume of saturated liquid
vg = specific volume of saturated vapor
vfg = vg vf
hfg is called the enthalpy of vaporization (or latent heat of vaporization). It is the energy needed to
vaporize a unit mass of saturated liquid at a given temperature or pressure. It decreases as the
temperature or pressure increases, and becomes zero at the critical point.
Example
A rigid tank contains 10 kg of saturated liquid water at 90 oC. Determine the pressure in the tank and
the volume of the tank.
T
o
At saturation, T = 90 C = Tsat
Thus, P = Psat @ 90C = 70.183 kPa
v = vf @ 90C = 0.001036 m3/kg
V = mv = 10 (0.001036)
= 0.01036 m3
Saturated
liquid
P = 70.183
Psat = 70.183 kPa
90 C
6
Example
200 g of saturated liquid water is completely vaporized at a constant pressure of 100 kPa. Determine
(a) the volume change and (b) the amount of energy transferred to the water.
P, kPa
100
vf
vg
v, m3/kg
In the saturated liquidvapor (or mixture) region, the proportion of the liquid and vapor phases in the
mixture is given by a property called the quality x defined as the ratio of the mass of vapor to the
total mass of the mixture.
x
where :
m vapor
mtotal
vg
saturated liquid
vf
vavg
7
Imagine that the saturated liquid and saturated vapor are mixed well, forming a homogeneous mixture.
The volume occupied by saturated liquid is Vf and the volume occupied by saturated vapor is Vg. The
total volume V is the sum of the two :
V = Vf + Vg
But
mtotal v avg m f v f m g v g
V = mv
m f mtotal m g
v avg 1 x v f xv g
v avg v f x v g v f v f xv fg
or
The analysis can be repeated for specific internal energy, specific enthalpy and specific entropy to give
u avg u f xu fg
havg h f xh fg
s avg s f xs fg
y avg y f xy fg
The subscript avg (for average) is usually dropped out for brevity !
Example
A rigid tank contains 10 kg of water at 90 oC. If 8 kg of the water is in the liquid form and the
remaining is in the vapor form, determine (a) the pressure in the tank and (b) the volume of the tank.
(a) Since there are two phases of water in the tank, the mixture is at saturation temperature of 90 oC
and the pressure is the saturation pressure at 90 oC
P = Psat@90 C = 70.183 kPa
(b) At Tsat = 90 oC, vf = 0.001036 m3/kg and vg = 2.3593 m3/kg
saturated vapor
Vg
vg
saturated liquid
OR
mg
mtotal
2
0 .2
10
v v f xv fg =
Vf
vf
8
Example
An 80 L vessel contains 4 kg of refrigerant-134a at a pressure of 160 kPa. Determine (a) the
temperature, (b) the quality, (c) the enthalpy of the refrigerant, and (d) the volume occupied by the
vapor phase.
(a)
The state postulate states that 2 independent intensive properties are needed to completely specify the
state of a system. We are only given pressure P . The other intensive property is
v
V 80 / 1000
0.02 m3/kg
m
4
Therefore :
vg = 0.12348 m3/kg.
v vf
v fg
0.02 0.0007437
= 0.157
0.12348 0.0007437
Superheated Vapor
Superheated vapor is single phase, and thus T and P are independent properties. Properties must be
obtained from the superheated tables. It is characterized by :
(a) T Tsat
(b) P Psat
(c) y y g
(a) .Given P, T
T
Pgiven
(b) . Given P, T
P
Tgiven
Tgiven
Psat
Tsat
Psat
Tsat
Pgiven
also
v
u, h, s
9
(c) Given P, y
(c) Given T, y
P
Pgiven
Tgiven
Psat
Tsat
Psat
Tsat
Pgiven
yg
yg
ygiven
Example
Determine the internal energy of water at 200 kPa and 300 oC.
Let
Psat = 200 kPa
Tsat = 120.21 oC.
Since Tgiven > Tsat the phase is superheated vapor.
Or draw a T-v diagram:
T, oC
200 kPa
Tgiven = 300
Psat =200 kPa
Tsat = 120.21
v
From superheated vapor table, u = 2808 kJ/kg.
Example
Determine the temperature of water at P = 0.5 MPa and h = 2890 kJ/kg.
Let Psat = P = 0.5 MPa From saturated table, hg = 2748.1 kJ/kg.
Since h > hg the phase is superheated vapor.
From superheated vapor table
T, oC
200
T=?
250
h , kJ/kg
2855.8
2890
2961.0
By linear interpolation
T = 200 +
= 216.3 oC
ygiven
10
3.4.4
Compressed liquid
Compressed liquid properties are largely independent of pressure increasing P by 100 times results
in property change of less than 1 % ! This explains the reason why compressed liquid tables are not
commonly available.
A generally accepted approximation is to treat compressed liquid as saturated liquid at the given
temperature . This is so because compressed liquid properties are more dependent on temperature
than they do on pressure. That is
y y f @T
where y = v, u, h or s
In general, a compressed liquid is characterized by:
(a) T Tsat
(b) P Psat
(c) y y f
(a) .Given P, T
T
(b) . Given P, T
P
Pgiven
Pgiven
Tsat
Psat
Psat
Tsat
Tgiven
Tgiven
also
v
u, h, s
(c) Given P, y
v
(c) Given T, y
P
Pgiven
.
Psat
Tsat
Tgiven
ygiven
v
yf
ygiven yf
11
Example
Determine the internal energy of compressed liquid water at 80 oC and 5 MPa, using (a) data from
compressed liquid table and (b) saturated liquid data. What is the error involved ?
Let Tsat = 80 oC for which Psat = 47.416 kPa.
Since 5 MPa > Psat the phase is compressed liquid.
(a) From compressed liquid table, u = 333.82 kJ/kg
(b) Using the approximation approach,
u u f ,80C = 334.97 kJ/kg an error of 0.34 %
Reference State and Reference Values
The properties u, h, and s cannot be measured directly, but calculated from measurable properties
using the appropriate thermodynamic equations. These equations give changes in properties, not the
values of properties at specified states.
Therefore, a convenient reference state is chosen, and zero value is assigned for a convenient property
or properties at that state.
For water, the state of saturated liquid at 0.01 oC is the reference state, where u = 0, s = 0
For refrigerant-134a, the reference state is for saturated liquid at 40 oC, where h = 0, s =0
Because of the reference state chosen, some property values can be negative !
In thermodynamics, we are concerned with changes in property values, not their absolute values.
where P is the absolute temperature, T is the absolute temperature, and v is the specific volume. A gas
that obeys this relation is called an ideal gas.
R = gas constant
12
The gas constant R is different for each gas, is calculated from
R
Ru
M
.. (kJ/kg.K or kPa.m3/kg.K)
Ru = 8.31447 kJ/kmol.K
= 8.31447 kPa.m3/kg.K
The molar mass M is defined as the mass of one mole (or gram-mole [gmol]) of a substance in
grams or the mass of one kmol (kilogram-mole [kgmol]) in kilograms. For nitrogen, M = 28
which means that the mass of 1 kmol of nitrogen is 28 kg.
The mass of a system is simply the product of its molar mass and the mole number N :
m = MN
(kg)
PV = mRT
PV = NRuT
It has been experimentally observed that the ideal-gas relation closely approximates the P-v-T
behavior of real gases at low densities which occur at low P and high T.
Familiar gases such as air, nitrogen oxygen, hydrogen, helium, argon, krypton, and heavier
gases such as CO2 can be treated as ideal gases with negligible errors (< 1 %)
Dense gases such water vapor in power plants and refrigerant vapors in refrigerators should not
be treated as ideal gases instead use property tables.
Example
Determine the mass of the air in a room with dimensions 4 x 5 x 6 m at 100 kPa and 25 oC.
V= 4x5x6 = 120 m3
R = 0.287 kJ/kg.K
T = 25 + 273 = 298 K
Assuming air is an ideal gas,
PV
100120
= 140.3 kg
RT 0.287 298
13
3.6
Compressibility Factor, Z
The ideal-gas relation can be used for real gases by including a correction factor called the
compressibility factor Z in the ideal-gas relation, where
Z
or
Pv
RT
Pv = ZRT
v actual
v ideal
where v ideal
RT
P
For ideal gases, Z = 1. The farther away Z is from unity, the more the gas deviates from idealgas behavior.
P
Pcr
T
TR =
Tcr
PR =
Principle of corresponding states = the Z factors for all gases is approximately the same at the same
reduced pressure and temperature
By curve-fitting all data for many different type of gases, we obtain the generalized compressibility
chart that can be used for all gases. These observations can be made for the chart :
Example
Determine the pressure of water vapor at 350 oC and 0.035262 m3/kg, using
(a) steam tables, (b) ideal-gas relation, and (c) the generalized compressibility chart
For water vapor, R = 0.4615 kJ/kg.K, Pcr = 22.06 kPa, Tcr = 647.1 K
(a) From tables, at 350 oC and 0.035262 m3/kg,
(b) Using ideal-gas assumption,
(c) compressibility chart, v R
TR =
RT 0.4615 623
v actual
0.035262 22.064
= 2.605
RTcr / Pcr
0.4615 647.1
T
623
= 0.96
Tcr
647.1
14
From chart, PR = 0.31. Therefore, P = PR Pcr = 0.31 (22.06) = 6.84 MPa (2.3 % error)
3.7
The ideal-gas relation is very simple, with limited range of applicability. Several more complex
equations have been proposed to extend the range of applicability.
Van der Waals Equation of State
Proposed in 1873 with two constants :
a
v b RT
v2
where,
27 R 2 Tcr2
64 Pcr
RTcr
b
8 Pcr
a
i.e. the constants a and b can be obtained for any substance from the critical-point data alone.
The accuracy is often inadequate, but has historical significance as it pioneered the attempts at
modeling the behavior of real gases. Greater accuracy is obtainable from other more complex
equations of state such as : Beattie-Bridgeman, Benedict-Webb-Rubin and Virial Eqn. Of State.