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3920614

1) Heat effects are important in chemical processes like the manufacture of ethylene glycol where heat is used and removed to maintain the reaction temperature of 250°C. 2) Sensible heat effects involve heat transfer without phase changes or chemical reactions, changing only the temperature. The heat transferred and resulting temperature change establish the system's state. 3) Standard heats of reaction and formation are defined based on reactions at a specified temperature, usually 298.15K, and refer to the heat change per mole of substance formed.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
63 views21 pages

3920614

1) Heat effects are important in chemical processes like the manufacture of ethylene glycol where heat is used and removed to maintain the reaction temperature of 250°C. 2) Sensible heat effects involve heat transfer without phase changes or chemical reactions, changing only the temperature. The heat transferred and resulting temperature change establish the system's state. 3) Standard heats of reaction and formation are defined based on reactions at a specified temperature, usually 298.15K, and refer to the heat change per mole of substance formed.

Uploaded by

Agam Hanasichula
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Advanced Thermodynamics

Note 3
Heat Effects

Lecturer: 郭修伯
Heat
• The manufacture of ethylene glycol:
– The catalytic oxidation reaction is most effective when
carried out at temperatures near 250°C.
– The reactants, ethylene and air are heated to this
temperature before they enter the reactor.
– Heat is removed from the reactor to maintain the
reaction temperature at 250 °C and to minimize the
production of CO2.
• Heat effects are important.
Sensible heat effects
• Heat transfer to a system in which there are no
phase transition, no chemical reactions, and no
changes in composition cause the temperature of
the system to change.
• Relation:
– Quantity of heat transferred
– The resulting temperature change
• Two intensive properties establishes its state: U =
U (T,V)
 U   U 
U  U (T ,V ) dU    dT    dV
 T V  V T

 U 
dU  CV dT    dV
 V T
constant-volume

dU  CV dT
mechanically reversible constant-volume process
T2
Q  U   CV dT
T1

.OR.
 H   H 
H  H (T , P) dH    dT    dP
 T  P  P T

 H 
dH  C P dT    dP
 P T
constant-pressure

dH  C P dT
mechanically reversible constant-pressure process
T2
Q  H   C P dT
T1
T T2
• Since Q   Cor  Cneed
Q , we C = f (T).
2

V dT P dT
T1 T1
• From empirical equation:
CP
 A  BT  CT 2  DT  2
R
• For gases, it is the ideal-gas heat capacity, rather than the actual heat capacity,
that is used in the evaluation of such thermodynamic properties as the
enthalpy.
– Calculate values for a ideal-gas state wherein ideal-gas heat capacities are used
– Correction to real-gas value
• Ideal-gas heat capacities:

• The two ideal-gas heat capacities:

C Pig in the ideal-gas2 state:  2


• The molar heat capacity of the mixture
 A  BT  CT  DT
R
CVig C Pig
 1
R R

C Pigmixture  y AC PA
ig
 y B C PB
ig
 yC C PC
ig
T CP  B C 2 2 D 
 T  T0 
T
• With   T0 R dT   A  T0 (  1)  T0 (    1)  2
T0  2 3 T0 

T CP T C
T0 R dT  ICPH (T 0, T ; A, B , C , D ) H  R T0 R dT  CP
P
H
(T  T0 )

The function name is ICPH


Mean heat capacity; subscript
“H” denotes a mean value
specific to enthalpy calculations.

CP H
 MCPH (T 0, T ; A, B, C , D) H
R T  T0
CP H
The function name is MCPH
It can be used to evaluate C P H
Calculate the heat required to raise the temperature of 1 mol of methane from 260
to 600°C in a steady-flow process at a pressure sufficiently low that methane may
be considered an ideal gas.

T 600  273.15
   1.6377
T0 260  273.15
ig
CP
T 873.15 C
Q  H  R  dT   P
dT
T0 R 533.15 R

 9.08110 3 2 2 2.164  10 6 3 3 
 8.3141.702T0 (  1)  T0 (  1)  T0 (  1)
 2 3 
 8.314  ICPH (533.15,873.15;1.702,9.081E  3,2.164 E  6,0.0)
 8.314  MCPH (533.15,873.15;1.702,9.081E  3,2.164 E  6,0.0) 873.15  533.15
 19778 J
What is the final temperature when heat in the amount of 0.4 x 10 6 Btu is added to
25 (lb mol) of ammonia initially at 500 °F in a steady-flow process at 1 (atm)?

Q 0.4 106 Btu J


H    16000  37218
n 25 lb mol mol

T0  500 F  533.15 K

H
T  T0
CP H

CP H
 MCPH (533.15, T ;3.578,3.020E  3,0.0,0.186E  5)
R

Start with a value T ≧ T0, T converges no the final value T = 1250K


Latent heats of pure substances
• A pure substance is liquefied from the solid state of vapori
zed from the liquid at constant pressure, no change in temp
erature
– The latent heat of fusion
– the latent heat of vaporization
• the coexistance of two phases
– According to the phase rule, its intensive state is determined by jus
t one intensive property.
dP sat
H  TV
dT

Latent heat Vapor pressure


• Rough estimates of latent heats of vaporization for pure liquids at their normal po
ints (Trouton‘s rule):

H n
~ 10
RTn
• Riedel (1954):
Absolute temperature of the normal boiling point
Critical temperature (bar)
H 1.092(ln PC  1.013)

– Accurate! Error rarely exceedn5%
– Water: RTn 0.930  Trn
Reduced temperature at Tn
• latent heat of vaporization of a pure liquid at any temperature, (Watson, 1943):

H n 1.092(ln 220.55  1.013) H n  13.56  8.314  373.15


  13.56
RTn 0.930  0.577

0.38
H 2  1  Tr 2 
  
H1  1  Tr1 
Given that the latent heat of vaporization of water at 100°C is 2257 J/g, estimate
the latent heat at 300 °C.
0.38
H 2  1  Tr 2 
  
H1  1  Tr1 

H1 (100 C )  2257


H 2 (300 C )  ?
Tr1  373.15 / 647.1  0.577
Tr 2  573.15 / 647.1  0.886

J
H 2 (300 C )  1371
g
Standard heat of reaction
• A standard state is a particular state of species at
temperature T and at specified conditions of pressure,
composition, and physical condition as e.g., gas, liquid, or
solid.
– Gases: the pure substance in the ideal-gas state at 1 bar. C P  C Pig
– Liquids and solids: the real pure liquid or solid at 1 bar. C 
P
– All conditions for a standard state are fixed except temperature.
Standard-state properties are therefore functions of temperature
only.
• Heat of reaction: 1 3
N 2  H 2  NH 3 H 298

 46100 J
2 2

N 2  3H 2  2 NH 3 H 298

 92220 J
Standard heat of formation
• A formation reaction is defined as a reaction which forms a
single compound from its constituent elements, e.g.,:
1
C  O2  2 H 2  CH 3OH
2
• The heat of formation is based on 1 mol of the compound
formed.
• The standard heat of formation : 298.15 K  H 
f 298

• The standard heat at 25°C for the reaction:


4 HCl( g )  2 H 2 ( g )  2Cl2 ( g ) H 298

 (4)(92307)

2 H 2( g )  O2 ( g )  2 H 2O( g ) H 298

 (2)(241818)

4 HCl( g )  O2( g )  2 H 2O( g )  2Cl2 ( g ) H 298



 114408
Standard heat of combustion
• A combustion reaction is defined as a reaction
between an element or compound and oxygen to
form specific combustion products.
– Many standard heats of formation com from standard
heats of combustion, measured calorimetrically.
– Data are based on 1 mol of the substance burned.
4C( s )  4O2( g )  4CO2 ( g ) H 298

 (4)(393509)
1
5 H 2 ( g )  2 O2( g )  5 H 2O(l ) H 298

 (5)(285830)
2
1
4CO2( g )  5H 2O(l )  C4 H10 ( g )  6 O2 ( g ) H 298

 2877396
2
4C( s )  5H 2 ( g )  C4 H10( g ) H 298

 125790
Temperature dependence of ΔH°
• A general chemical reaction:
v1 A1  v2 A2  ...  v3 A3  v4 A4  ...
– standard heat of reaction:
H    vi H i
i
– if the standard-state enthalpies of all elements are
arbitrary set equal to zero as the basis of calculation:
H    vi H i   vi H fi
i i
– For standard reactions, products and reactants are
always at the standard-state pressure of 1 bar:
dH i  C Pi dT
dH  C dT
i
 
Pi
 v dH   v C
i
i i

i
i

Pi dT

 i i  i i  i Pi dT
i
d ( v H 
)  d ( v H 

i
)  v C 

H    (vi H i ) C P   vi C Pi
i i

dH   C P dT

C P T
H   H 0  C P (T  T0 )
H  H  R 
 
0 dT H
T0 R

H   H 0  R  IDCPH (T0 , T ; DA, DB, DC , DD)

H   H 0  R  MDCPH (T0 , T ; DA, DB, DC , DD)  (T  T0 )


Calculate the standard heat of the methanol-synthesis reaction at 800 °C.
CO( g )  2 H 2( g )  CH 3OH ( g )

H 0  H 298

K  200660  ( 110525)  90135

C P
T
H  H  R 
 
0 dT
T0 R

H   H 0  R  ( MDCPH (298.15,1073.15;7.663,10.815 E  3,3.450 E  6,0.135 E  5)(T  T0 )


 90135  8.314  (1615.5)  (1073.15  298.15)
 103566
What is the maximum temperature that can be reached by the combustion of
methane with 20% excess air? Both the methane and the air enter the burner at
25°C. CH  2O  CO  2 H O
4( g ) 2( g ) 2( g ) 2 (g)

H 0  H 298

K  393509  ( 2)(241818)  ( 74520)  802625

Maximum attainable temperature → adiabatic, Q = 0 → ΔH = 0


H 298

 H P  H  0
Products at 1 bar and T K
H 298

1 mol CO2
T  298.15  
CP 2 mol H2O
H

Start with T > 298.15 K 0.4 mol O2


and converge on a final ΔH = 0 9.03 mol N2
value of T = 2066K H P
  ni C Pi
H
 T  298.15
Reactants at 1 bar and 25°C i

1 mol CH4  C P
H
 T  298.15
2.4 mol O2
H 298

K
9.03 mol N2
Catalytic reforming of CH4: CH 4( g )  H 2O( g )  CO( g )  3H 2 ( g )
The only other reaction occurs: CO( g )  H 2O( g )  CO2( g )  H 2 ( g )
Calculate the heat requirement.
CH 4( g )  H 2O( g )  CO( g )  3H 2 ( g ) H 298

 205813
CO( g )  H 2O( g )  CO2 ( g )  H 2 ( g ) H 298

 41166 Not independent, choose
(1) and (3) reactions
CH 4( g )  2 H 2O( g )  CO2 ( g )  4 H 2 ( g ) H 298

 164647

ΔH = 0 Products at 1 bar and 1300 K


0.87 mol CO
3.13 mol H2
Reactants at 1 bar and 600K 0.13 mol CO2
1 mol CH4 0.87 mol H2O
2 mol H2O H P
  ni C Pi
H
 T  298.15
H 
R
i

 C P
H
 T  298.15
H 298

K
H  H R  H 298

 H P

CH 4 ( g )  H 2O( g )  CO( g )  3H 2 ( g ) H 298



 205813

CH 4 ( g )  2 H 2O( g )  CO2( g )  4 H 2 ( g ) H 298



 164647

0.87 mol CH4 by (1) and 0.13 mol CH4 by (3)


H 298

K  (0.87)( 205813)  (0.13)(164647)  200460

H R
  ni C Pi
H
 298.15  600
i

 (1)(MCPH (600,298.15;1.702,9.081E  3,2.164E  6,0.0)  


 8.314    298.15  600
 (2)(MCPH (600,298.15;3.470,1.450E  3,0.0,0.121E  5) 
 34390
H P
  ni C Pi
H
1300  298.15  161940
i

H  H R  H 298

 H P  328010 Q  H  328010
Steady flow, no shaft work, kinetic and
potential energy changes are negligible

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