7. Excess Gibbs Energy Models - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 9
About This Presentation
Title:

7. Excess Gibbs Energy Models

Description:

Practicing engineers find most of the liquid-phase information needed for ... Ternary (or higher) Systems - Wilson, NRTL, Uniquac ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:531
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 10
Provided by: par55
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: 7. Excess Gibbs Energy Models


1
7. Excess Gibbs Energy Models
  • Practicing engineers find most of the
    liquid-phase information needed for equilibrium
    calculations in the form of excess Gibbs Energy
    models. These models
  • reduce vast quantities of experimental data into
    a few empirical parameters,
  • provide information an equation format that can
    be used in thermodynamic simulation packages
    (Provision)
  • Simple empirical models
  • Symmetric, Margules, vanLaar
  • No fundamental basis but easy to use
  • Parameters apply to a given temperature, and the
    models usually cannot be extended beyond binary
    systems.
  • Local composition models
  • Wilsons, NRTL, Uniquac
  • Some fundamental basis
  • Parameters are temperature dependent, and
    multi-component behaviour can be predicted from
    binary data.

2
Excess Gibbs Energy Models
  • Our objectives are to learn how to fit Excess
    Gibbs Energy models to experimental data, and to
    learn how to use these models to calculate
    activity coefficients.

3
Margules Equations
  • While the simplest Redlich/Kister-type expansion
    is the Symmetric Equation, a more accurate model
    is the Margules expression
  • (12.9a)
  • Note that as x1 goes to zero,
  • and from Lhopitals rule we know
  • therefore,
  • and similarly

4
Margules Equations
  • If you have Margules parameters, the activity
    coefficients are easily derived from the excess
    Gibbs energy expression
  • (12.9a)
  • to yield
  • (12.10ab)
  • These empirical equations are widely used to
    describe binary solutions. A knowledge of A12
    and A21 at the given T is all we require to
    calculate activity coefficients for a given
    solution composition.

5
van Laar Equations
  • Another two-parameter excess Gibbs energy model
    is developed from an expansion of (RTx1x2)/GE
    instead of GE/RTx1x2. The end results are
  • (12.16)
  • for the excess Gibbs energy and
  • (12.17a)
  • (12.17b)
  • for the activity coefficients.
  • Note that as x1?0, ln?1? ? A12
  • and as x2 ? 0, ln?2? ? A21

6
8. Non-Ideal VLE to Moderate Pressure SVNA 14.1
  • We now have the tools required to describe and
    calculate vapour-liquid equilibrium conditions
    for even the most non-ideal systems.
  • 1. Equilibrium Criteria
  • In terms of chemical potential
  • In terms of mixture fugacity
  • 2. Fugacity of a component in a non-ideal gas
    mixture
  • 3. Fugacity of a component in a non-ideal liquid
    mixture

7
g, f Formulation of VLE Problems
  • To this point, Raoults Law was only description
    we had for VLE behaviour
  • We have repeatedly observed that calculations
    based on Raoults Law do not predict actual phase
    behaviour due to over-simplifying assumptions.
  • Accurate treatment of non-ideal phase equilibrium
    requires the use of mixture fugacities. At
    equilibrium, the fugacity of each component is
    the same in all phases. Therefore,
  • or,
  • determines the VLE behaviour of non-ideal systems
    where Raoults Law fails.

8
Non-Ideal VLE to Moderate Pressures
  • A simpler expression for non-ideal VLE is created
    upon defining a lumped parameter, F.
  • The final expression becomes,
  • (i 1,2,3,,N) 14.1
  • To perform VLE calculations we therefore require
    vapour pressure data (Pisat), vapour mixture and
    pure component fugacity correlations (?i) and
    liquid phase activity coefficients (?i).

9
Non-Ideal VLE to Moderate Pressures
  • Sources of Data
  • 1. Vapour pressure Antoines Equation (or
    similar correlations)
  • 14.3
  • 2. Vapour Fugacity Coefficients Viral EOS (or
    others)
  • 14.6
  • 3. Liquid Activity Coefficients
  • Binary Systems - Margules,van Laar, Wilson, NRTL,
    Uniquac
  • Ternary (or higher) Systems - Wilson, NRTL,
    Uniquac
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com