(23.4.7),(23.4.8)
Example 1: At 1 bar, the boiling point of water is 373K. At what pressure does water boil at 473K ? Take the heat of vaporization of water to be 40.65kJ/mo4.
Ans: Let P1 = 1bar and T1=373K. Take T2=473K, and we need to calculate P2. Substituting in the numbers, we find
The vaporization curves of most liquids have similar shapes with the vapor pressure steadily increasing as the temperature increases (Figure 23.4.1).
Figure 23.4.1: The Vapor Pressures of Several Liquids as a Function of Temperature. The point at which the vapor pressure curve crosses the P = 1 atm line (dashed) is the normal boiling point of the liquid.
A good approach is to find a mathematical model for the pressure increase as a function of temperature. Experiments showed that the vapor pressure P and temperature T are related,
(23.4.26)
where ΔHvap is the Enthalpy (heat) of Vaporization and R is the gas constant (8.3145 J mol-1 K-1).
A simple relationship can be found by integrating Equation 23.4.26 between two pressure-temperature endpoints:
(23.4.27)
where P1 and P2 are the vapor pressures at two temperatures T1 and T2. Equation 23.4.27 is known as the Clausius-Clapeyron Equation and allows us to estimate the vapor pressure at another temperature, if the vapor pressure is known at some temperature, and if the enthalpy of vaporization is known.
The order of the temperatures in Equation 23.4.27 matters as the Clausius-Clapeyron Equation is sometimes written with a negative sign (and switched order of temperatures):
(23.4.28)
Example 2: The vapor pressure of water is 1.0 atm at 373 K, and the enthalpy of vaporization is 40.7 kJ mol-1. Estimate the vapor pressure at temperature 363 and 383 K respectively.
Ans: Using the Clausius-Clapeyron equation (Equation 23.4.28 23.4.28 ), we have:
Note that the increase in vapor pressure from 363 K to 373 K is 0.303 atm, but the increase from 373 to 383 K is 0.409 atm. The increase in vapor pressure is not a linear process.
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