Chapter 3

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Thermodynamics: An Engineering Approach

Seventh Edition
Yunus A. Cengel, Michael A. Boles
McGraw-Hill, 2011

Chapter 3
PROPERTIES OF PURE SUBSTANCES

Copyright The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

PURE SUBSTANCE
Pure substance: A substance that has a fixed chemical
composition throughout.
Air is a mixture of several gases, but it is considered to be a pure
substance.

PHASE-CHANGE PROCESSES OF PURE SUBSTANCES


Compressed liquid (subcooled liquid): A substance that it is
not about to vaporize.
Saturated liquid: A liquid that is about to vaporize.
At 1 atm and 20C,
water exists in the
liquid phase
(compressed liquid).

At 1 atm pressure
and 100C, water
exists as a liquid
that is ready to
vaporize
(saturated liquid).
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Saturated vapor: A vapor that is about to condense.


Saturated liquidvapor mixture: The state at which the liquid
and vapor phases coexist in equilibrium.
Superheated vapor: A vapor that is not about to condense (i.e.,
not a saturated vapor).

At 1 atm pressure, the


As more heat is transferred,
temperature remains
part of the saturated liquid
constant at 100C until the
vaporizes (saturated liquid last drop of liquid is vaporized
vapor mixture).
(saturated vapor).

As more heat is
transferred, the
temperature of the
vapor starts to rise
(superheated vapor).
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If the entire process between state 1 and 5 described in the figure is


reversed by cooling the water while maintaining the pressure at the
same value, the water will go back to state 1, retracing the same path,
and in so doing, the amount of heat released will exactly match the
amount of heat added during the heating process.

T-v diagram for the


heating process of
water at constant
pressure.
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Saturation Temperature and Saturation Pressure

The temperature at which water starts boiling depends on the pressure; therefore, if
the pressure is fixed, so is the boiling temperature.
Water boils at 100C at 1 atm pressure.
Saturation temperature Tsat: The 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.

The liquidvapor
saturation curve
of a pure
substance
(numerical
values are for
water).

Latent heat: The amount of energy absorbed


or released during a phase-change process.
Latent heat of fusion: The amount of energy
absorbed during melting. It is equivalent to
the amount of energy released during
freezing.
Latent heat of vaporization: The amount of
energy absorbed during vaporization and it is
equivalent to the energy released during
condensation.
The magnitudes of the latent heats depend
on the temperature or pressure at which the
phase change occurs.
At 1 atm pressure, the latent heat of fusion of
water is 333.7 kJ/kg and the latent heat of
vaporization is 2256.5 kJ/kg.
The atmospheric pressure, and thus the
boiling temperature of water, decreases with
elevation.
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Some Consequences of Tsat and


Psat Dependence
The variation of
the temperature
of fruits and
vegetables with
pressure during
vacuum cooling
from 25C to 0C.

In 1775, ice was made


by evacuating the air
space in a water tank.

PROPERTY DIAGRAMS FOR PHASE-CHANGE PROCESSES


The variations of properties during phase-change processes are best studied and
understood with the help of property diagrams such as the T-v, P-v, and P-T diagrams
for pure substances.

T-v diagram of
constant-pressure
phase-change
processes of a pure
substance at various
pressures
(numerical values
are for water).

saturated liquid line


saturated vapor line
compressed liquid region
superheated vapor region
saturated liquidvapor mixture
region (wet region)

At supercritical
pressures (P > Pcr),
there is no distinct
phase-change
(boiling) process.

Critical point: The point


at which the saturated
liquid and saturated vapor
states are identical.

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Extending the Diagrams


to Include
the Solid Phase

For water,
Ttp = 0.01C
Ptp = 0.6117 kPa

At triple-point pressure
and temperature, a
substance exists in three
phases in equilibrium.

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Sublimation:
Passing from the
solid phase directly
into the vapor phase.

At low pressures
(below the triple-point
value), solids
evaporate without
melting first
(sublimation).

Phase Diagram

P-T diagram of pure substances.


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The P-v-T surfaces present a great deal of information at once, but in a


thermodynamic analysis it is more convenient to work with two-dimensional
diagrams, such as the P-v and T-v diagrams.

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PROPERTY TABLES

For most substances, the relationships among thermodynamic properties are too
complex to be expressed by simple equations.
Therefore, properties are frequently presented in the form of tables.
Some thermodynamic properties can be measured easily, but others cannot and are
calculated by using the relations between them and measurable properties.
The results of these measurements and calculations are presented in tables in a
convenient format.

EnthalpyA Combination Property

The
combination
u + Pv is
frequently
encountered
in the analysis The product pressure
of control
volume has energy units.
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volumes.

Saturated Liquid and Saturated Vapor States


Table A4: Saturation properties of water under temperature.
Table A5: Saturation properties of water under pressure.
A partial list of Table A4.

Enthalpy of vaporization, hfg (Latent


heat of vaporization): The amount of
energy needed to vaporize a unit mass
of saturated liquid at a given
temperature or pressure.

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Examples:
Saturated liquid
and saturated
vapor states of
water on T-v and
P-v diagrams.

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Saturated LiquidVapor Mixture


Quality, x : The ratio of the mass of vapor to the total mass of the mixture.
Quality is between 0 and 1
0: sat. liquid, 1: sat. vapor.
The properties of the saturated liquid are the same whether it exists alone or in
a mixture with saturated vapor.
Temperature and
pressure are dependent
properties for a mixture.

The relative
amounts of
liquid and
vapor phases
in a saturated
mixture are
specified by
the quality x.

A two-phase system can be


treated as a homogeneous
mixture for convenience.

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v, u, or h.

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Examples: Saturated liquid-vapor


mixture states on T-v and P-v diagrams.

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In the region to the right of the


saturated vapor line and at
temperatures above the critical
point temperature, a substance
exists as superheated vapor.
In this region, temperature and
pressure are independent
properties.

Superheated Vapor
Compared to saturated vapor,
superheated vapor is characterized by

At a specified
P, superheated
vapor exists at
a higher h than
the saturated
vapor.
A partial
listing of
Table A6.

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The compressed liquid properties


depend on temperature much more
strongly than they do on pressure.

Compressed Liquid
Compressed liquid is characterized by

y v, u, or h
A more accurate relation for h

A compressed liquid
may be approximated
as a saturated liquid at
the given temperature.
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Question: Complete this table for H2O.

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Question: 1 kg of water fills a 150 L rigid container at an initial pressure of 2 MPa. The
container is then cooled to 40 oC. Determine the initial temperature and final pressure of
the water.

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Reference State and Reference Values

The values of u, h, and s cannot be measured directly, and they are calculated from measurable
properties using the relations between properties.
However, those relations give the changes in properties, not the values of properties at specified
states.
Therefore, we need to choose a convenient reference state and assign a value of zero for a
convenient property or properties at that state.
The referance state for water is 0.01C and for R-134a is -40C in tables.
Some properties may have negative values as a result of the reference state chosen.
Sometimes different tables list different values for some properties at the same state as a result of
using a different reference state.
However, In thermodynamics we are concerned with the changes in properties, and the reference
state chosen is of no consequence in calculations.

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THE IDEAL-GAS EQUATION OF STATE

Equation of state: Any equation that relates the pressure, temperature, and
specific volume of a substance.
The simplest and best-known equation of state for substances in the gas phase is
the ideal-gas equation of state. This equation predicts the P-v-T behavior of a gas
quite accurately within some properly selected region.

Ideal gas equation


of state

R: gas constant
M: molar mass (kg/kmol)
Ru: universal gas constant

Different substances have different


gas constants.

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Mass = Molar mass Mole number

Ideal gas equation at two


states for a fixed mass

Various expressions
of ideal gas equation

Real gases behave as an ideal gas at low


densities (i.e., low pressure, high temperature).

Properties per unit mole are


denoted with a bar on the top.

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Is Water Vapor an Ideal Gas?

At pressures below 10 kPa, water


vapor can be treated as an ideal gas,
regardless of its temperature, with
negligible error (less than 0.1
percent).
At higher pressures, however, the
ideal gas assumption yields
unacceptable errors, particularly in
the vicinity of the critical point and
the saturated vapor line.
In air-conditioning applications, the
water vapor in the air can be treated
as an ideal gas. Why?
In steam power plant applications,
however, the pressures involved are
usually very high; therefore, ideal-gas
relations should not be used.

Percentage of error ([|vtable - videal|/vtable] 100) involved in


assuming steam to be an ideal gas, and the region where steam
can be treated as an ideal gas with less than 1 percent error.

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Question: A 1-m3 tank containing air at 25C and 500 kPa is connected through a valve
to another tank containing 5 kg of air at 35C and 200 kPa. Now the valve is opened,
and the entire system is allowed to reach thermal equilibrium with the surroundings,
which are at 20C. Determine the volume of the second tank and the final equilibrium
pressure of air.

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COMPRESSIBILITY FACTORA MEASURE


OF DEVIATION FROM IDEAL-GAS BEHAVIOR
Compressibility factor Z
A factor that accounts for
the deviation of real gases
from ideal-gas behavior at
a given temperature and
pressure.

The farther away Z is from unity, the more the


gas deviates from ideal-gas behavior.
Gases behave as an ideal gas at low densities
(i.e., low pressure, high temperature).
Question: What is the criteria for low pressure
and high temperature?
Answer: The pressure or temperature of a gas
is high or low relative to its critical temperature
or pressure.

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Reduced
pressure

Reduced
temperature
Pseudo-reduced
specific volume

Comparison of Z factors for various gases.

Z can also be determined from


a knowledge of PR and vR.

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OTHER EQUATIONS OF
STATE
Several equations have been proposed to
represent the P-v-T behavior of substances
accurately over a larger region with no
limitations.

Van der Waals


Equation of State

Critical isotherm
of a pure
substance has
an inflection
point at the
critical state.

This model includes two effects not considered


in the ideal-gas model: the intermolecular
attraction forces and the volume occupied by the
molecules themselves. The accuracy of the van
der Waals equation of state is often inadequate.

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Beattie-Bridgeman Equation of State


The constants are given in
Table 34 for various
substances. It is known to be
reasonably accurate for
densities up to about 0.8cr.

Benedict-Webb-Rubin Equation of State

The constants are given in Table 34. This equation can handle substances
at densities up to about 2.5 cr.

Virial Equation of State

The coefficients a(T), b(T), c(T), and so on, that are


functions of temperature alone are called virial coefficients.
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Percentage of error involved in various equations of


state for nitrogen
(% error = [(|vtable - vequation|)/vtable] 100).

Complex equations of
state represent the P-vT behavior of gases
more accurately over a
wider range.
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