Chapter Three

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Thermodynamics: An Engineering Approach,

Yunus A. Cengel, Michael A. Boles


McGraw-Hill, 2008

Chapter 3
PROPERTIES OF PURE
SUBSTANCES

Lect.Dr. Hiba Mudhafar Hashim


Part A/ Lec.5

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PURE SUBSTANCE
• Pure substance: A substance that has a fixed chemical composition
throughout.Ex:H2O, N2, CO2, He
• A mixture of various chemical elements or compounds also qualifies as a pure substance as long
as the mixture is homogeneous ex:H2O
• A mixture of two or more phases of a pure substance is still a pure substance as long as the
chemical composition of all phases is the same

SOLID

Nitrogen and gaseous air are pure


substances. A mixture of ice and liquid water
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Phases of a Pure Substance
SOLID LIQUID GAS

The arrangement of atoms in different phases:


(a) Molecules are at relatively fixed positions in a solid.
Because of small distance, the attractive forces of •The molecules in a solid
molecules on each other are large , are kept at their positions
(b) Groups of molecules move about each other in the by the large springlike
liquid phase, and inter-molecular forces.
(c) Molecules move about at random in the gas phase. •Intermolecular bonds
are strongest in solids
and weakest in gases
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Phase-change Processes of Pure Substances

➢At 1 atm and 20°C,


➢Liquid phase
➢Heat added → T 
➢not about to vaporize
Compressed Liquid Saturated liquid

➢At 1 atm and 100°C,


➢Liquid phase
➢Heat added → Evaporation start T-v diagram
➢Ready to vaporize
Saturated Liquid

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➢At 1 atm and 100°C
➢Heat added →the saturated liquid continues
evaporation
➢Liquid and vapor phases coexist in
equilibrium.
➢T constant
Saturated Liquid-vapor Mixture

➢At 1 atm and 100°C,


➢The temperature remains constant
until all liquid evaporated Saturated liquid
Saturated vapor
➢Vapor phase, on the borderline of
the liquid phase
➢Heat remove → condensation
Saturated Vapor

Note:The amount of energy States between 2 and 4 is referred to as


absorbed during vaporization is a saturated liquid–vapor mixture
called the latent heat of
vaporization 6
What is Latent Heat?
• 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.

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➢At 1 atm, T > 100C
➢Heat added → T
➢Not about to condense
Superheated Vapor

Saturated liquid

Saturated
vapor

T-v diagram for the heating process of water at constant pressure. 8


Saturation Temperature and Saturation Pressure

Saturation temperature Tsat:


The temperature at which a pure
substance changes phase at a
given pressure.

Saturation pressure Psat:


Saturated liquid
The pressure at which a pure
substance changes phase at a
given temperature.
Saturated
vapor

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The T-v Diagram
➢The statement “water boils at 100°C” is incorrect
➢Water start boiling at 100°C at 1 atm (101.325 kPa or 0.1 MPa)
➢If the pressure inside the cylinder were raised to 10 MPa, water would start boiling
at 179.9°C.
➢the specific volume of the saturated liquid is larger than 1 atm
➢specific volume of the saturated vapor is smaller

the temperature at which water


starts boiling depends on the
pressure; therefore, if the
pressure is fixed, so is the
boiling temperature

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• saturated liquid line
• saturated vapor line
• compressed liquid region
• superheated vapor region
• saturated liquid–vapor mixture
region (wet region)

T-v diagram of a pure substance.


At supercritical Critical point: The point at
pressures (P > Pcr), which the saturated liquid
there is no distinct and saturated vapor states
phase-change (boiling) are identical. Tcr and Pcr
process. 11
The P-v Diagram
The general shape of the P-v is very much like the T-v diagram,
but the T constant lines on this diagram have a downward
trend

12
Extending the Diagrams For water,
to Include Ttp = 0.01°C
Ptp = 0.6117 kPa
the Solid Phase
At triple-point pressure and
temperature, a substance exists
in three phases in equilibrium.

P-v diagram of a substance that


contracts on freezing.

P-v diagram of a substance that expands


on freezing (such as water). 13
Sublimation: Passing from Phase Diagram
the solid phase directly into
the vapor phase.

At low pressures (below the


triple-point value), solids P-T diagram of pure substances.
evaporate without melting
first (sublimation).

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Part B/ Lec.6

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Property Tables
Properties are presented in the form of tables.
• Table A–4: Saturation properties of water under temperature.
• Table A–5: Saturation properties of water under pressure.
• use Table A–4 when temperature is given and Table A–5 when pressure is
given
Specific volume (v) , Internal energy (u) , enthalpy (h) , entropy (s)

The subscript f is used to denote properties of a saturated liquid,


The subscript g to denote the properties of saturated vapor
fg denotes the difference. For ex, vfg = vg - vf

Specific volume
is volume per unit (m3/kg)
mass.

Enthalpy
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Saturated Liquid and Saturated Vapor States

Saturated Saturated
liquid vapor

84.6 T=95C

A partial list of Table A–4.

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EXAMPLE 3–1 Pressure of Saturated Liquid in a Tank

T-v diagram
,kPa

70.2 90C

vf
P-v diagram 18
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Compressed Liquid
The compressed liquid properties depend on temperature much more strongly than
they do on pressure.
Increasing the pressure 100 times often causes properties to change less than 1
percent
A compressed liquid may be approximated as a saturated liquid at the given
temperature.
y → v, u, or h

The subscript f is used to denote properties of a


saturated liquid (TABLE A-7)

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EXAMPLE
Determine the specific volume and internal energy of
liquid water at 80°C and 500 kPa

Solution: Table A-5 Tsat @ 500 kPa =151.83C.


T < Tsat → compressed liquid

Table A-4 v = vf @ 80C


u = uf @ 80C

Table A-7 v = v @ 80C and 5 MPa


u = uf @ 80C and 5 MPa

Answer: A-4 v = 0.001029 m3/kg , u = 334.97 kJ/kg


A-7 v =0.0010267 m3/kg, u = 333.82 kJ/kg

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Superheated Vapor
➢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.
➢Properties of superheated vapor are listed at Table A-6

The format of A-6


table is different than
A-4 table
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EXAMPLE
Determine the internal energy of water at 200 kPa and 300°C.
Solution: From table A-5, at 200 kPa, → Tsat = 120.21C
T > Tsat @ 200 kPa → Superheated vapor
Refer table A-6 , At P= 0.2 MPa and T=300C → u=2808.8 kJ/kg

EXAMPLE
Determine the temperature of water at a state of P 0.5 MPa and h
2961.0 kJ/kg.
Solution: Table A-5 , at P=0.5 MPa → hg = 2748.1 kJ/kg
h > hg @ 0.5 MPa → Superheated vapor
Refer table A-6 , at P=0.5 MPa and h=2961.0 kJ/kg →T=250C
kPa

250

151.83

500
T=250
T=151.83
hg=2748.1 23
v > vg
Saturated Liquid–Vapor Mixture
➢During a vaporization process, a substance exists as a mixture of saturated liquid and
saturated vapor
➢Introduce new property to analyze this mixture →Quality (x)
➢Investigate the relative amounts of liquid and vapor

0>x>1
Saturated liquid

Saturated
vapor

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Saturated Liquid–Vapor 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.


If x =0.4 40% = saturated vapor 60% = sat. liquid

X=0.4

vf vg
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y v, u, or h.
yfg = yg - yf
The value of a average saturated liquid–vapor
mixture lies between saturated liquid and
saturated vapor

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EXAMPLE
A system contain saturated liquid-vapor mixture at temperature 100C and x=0.8.
Determine the specific volume of the mixture
Solution: From table A-4, at 100C,
vf = 0.001043 m3/kg and vg=1.6720 m3/kg
Therefore v = vf + x ( vg - vf ) = 0.001043 + 0.8 (1.6720-0.001043) = 1.338 m3/kg

EXAMPLE
Determine the quality, x, specific volume and specific internal energy,u of water at
a given pressure 700 kPa and enthalpy 2600 kJ/kg

Solution: From table A-5, at 700 kPa,


hg = 2762.8 kJ/kg and hf = 697 kJ/kg
since hf < h < hg → liquid-vapor mixture

from equation h = hf + xhfg


2600 = 697 + x (2762.8 – 697)
x = 0.921

v = vf + x vfg = 0.001108 + (0.921)(0.27278-0.001108) = 0.2513 m3/kg

u = uf + x Ufg = 696.23 + (0.921)(1875.6) = 2423.6 kJ/kg


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EXAMPLE Properties of Saturated Liquid–Vapor Mixture
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.
Solution
V 0.080 m 3
v= = = 0.02 m 3 / kg
m 4 kg
From table A-12, vf = 0.0007437 m3/kg , vg = 0.12348 m3/kg
Since vf < v <vg, → saturated mixture
Therefore T = Tsat @ P= 160 kPa = -15.60C

From equation v=vf + x vfg,


x = (v – vf)/ vfg
= 0.157
Also h = hf + xhfg
= 64.2 kJ/kg

mg = x mt = 0.157 (4 kg) = 0.628 kg

Vg = mgvg = 0.628 (0.12348) = 0.0775 m3


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Interpolation

y2 2

yt − y1 x − x1 t
= t yt
y 2 − y1 x 2 − x1
1
y1

x
x2 xt x1

 xt − x1 
yt =  ( y 2 − y1 ) + y1
 x2 − x1 
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EXAMPLE
Determine temperature of saturated vapor water at P= 420 kPa
Solution
From table A-5, P=420 kPa is not listed but it supposed to sit between 400 and 450 kPa
TS − 143 .61 420 − 400
T C P (kPa) =
147 .90 − 143 .61 450 − 400
143.61 400
 420 − 400 
Ts 420 Ts =  (147 .90 − 143 .61) + 143 .61
 450 − 400 
147.90 450
Ts = 145.326 C
EXAMPLE
Determine specific volume and specific enthalpy of water at P=1400 kPa and T=420C
Solution
From Table A-5, Ts=195.04C. since T>Ts →Superheated vapor
Refer Table A-6 , at P=1.40 MPa

 420 − 400 
v420 =  (0.2521 − 0.2178 ) + 0.2178 = 0.2247 m / kg
3
T v h
 500 − 400 
400 0.2178 3257.5
 420 − 400 
420 V420 h420 h420 =  (3474 .1 − 3257 .5 ) + 3257 .5 = 3300 .8kJ / kg
500 0.2521 3474.1  500 − 400 
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Ideal Gas
Gas and vapor are often used as synonymous words.
The vapor phase of a substance is customarily called a gas when it is above the critical
temperature.
Vapor usually implies a gas that is not far from a state of condensation.
P

T2>T1

T1
v

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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.

PV = mRT
Pv = RT
V
Since v=
m
R: gas constant/pemalar gas
M: molar mass (kg/kmol)
N : Mole number
Ru: universal gas constant/pemalar
gas semesta
Ru = MR = 8.3143 kJ/kg.K
Different substances have
m = Molar mass  Mole number PV = NMRT = NRuT different gas constants.

P1V1 P2V2
Ma R a = Mb R b =
T1 T2
a =gas a , b=gas b 32
EXAMPLE
Determine the mass of the air in a room whose dimensions are 4m x 5m x 6 m at 100 kPa and 25°C.

Solution
Table A–1, the gas constant of air is R = 0.287 kPa · m3/kg · K, and the absolute temperature is T= 25°C
+273 = 298 K. The volume of the room is
V= 14 m2 x15 m2 x 16 m2 = 120 m3

m=
pV
=
(
(100 kPa ) 120 m 3 ) = 140 .3kg
RT ( )
0.287 kPa .m 3 / kg .K (208 K )

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