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CHEM 433 – 11/1/11

CHEM 433 – 11/1/11. V. Phase Equilibria (Pure Substances) • Intro & definitions. • Phase diagrams - CO 2 , H 2 O, C • Phase Stability vs. T READ: CHAPTER 4 HW #6: via e-mail – DUE Th. EXAM #3 on Tuesday – review(s) Monday Web up to date with review sheet today.

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CHEM 433 – 11/1/11

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  1. CHEM 433 – 11/1/11 V. Phase Equilibria (Pure Substances) • Intro & definitions. • Phase diagrams - CO2 , H2O, C • Phase Stability vs. T READ: CHAPTER 4 HW #6: via e-mail – DUE Th. EXAM #3 on Tuesday – review(s) Monday Web up to date with review sheet today.

  2. Phase: A form of mater, uniform in chemical composition and physical state. Phase Transition: The spontaneous conversion of one phase to another (e.g. g —> l) Transition Temperature (Ttrs): Chemical potentials of 2 phases are equal and the 2 phases are in equilibrium Phase Diagram: Shows regions of P and T in which phases are stable Phase boundaries: p and T where 2 phases co-exist (in eq. , ’s are =). Vapor pressure: pressure of vapor in eq. with liquid (the l-v boundary). Sublimation vapor pressure: pressure of vapor in eq. with solid (s-v phase boundary)

  3. Boiling: A condition of free vaporization throughout the liquid. Boiling temperature(Tb): T at which vapor pressure equals external pressure Normal boiling: boiling T at 1 atm external pressure Standard boiling point: boiling T at 1 bar external pressure. Freezing/Melting Temperature (Tf): T at which liquid and solid are in EQ at a given p. Normal/Standard Tf: as above, for 1 atm or 1 bar, respectively.

  4. Triple point: Temperature and pressure at which 3 phases coexist (usually s, l, g). Critical temperature: T when surface between phases disappears (closed system). Density of (l) and (g) become equal! Critical pressure: vapor pressure at critical temperature. Supercritical Fluid: The name of the phase above the critical point.

  5. Phase Diagram :CO2 • How much pressure is needed to liquefy CO2? • What is its normal boiling point? • What is T of “dry ice bath”? • What phase does one have at T = 310K? • Is slope (dP/dT) of solid-liquid boundary “+” or “–”?

  6. Phase Diagram :H2O • Notice slope of “Ice I” – liquid boundary – positive or negative? • How many triple points • What is Tc (presumably)?

  7. Phase diagram for Carbon (note 1 GPa = 109 Pa = 104 bar) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O42K4EwVssQ

  8. Phase diagram of H2O and the greenhouse effect

  9. This picture is a “slice” through the phase diagram at p > T.P. • You re-draw this for: • p < that of triple point • p = to that of triple point

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