Title: Phase Diagrams
1Chapter 8
2Definitions
- Phase signifies a state of matter that is uniform
throughout, not only in chemical composition but
also in physical state. - The number of phases in a system is denoted P.
- In a solution, atoms of A are surrounded by atoms
of A and B, and any sample cut from it, however
small. Is representative of the composition of
the whole. - A dispersion is uniform in the macroscopic scale
but not on a microscopic scale, for it consists
of grains or droplets of one substance in a
matrix of the other. - The ability to control the microstructure
resulting from phase equilbria makes it possible
to tailor the mechanical properties of the
materials to a particular application.
3Definitions
- A constituent of a system is a chemical species
that is present. - A component is a chemically independent
constituent of a system. - The number of components, C, in a system is the
min. of independent species necessary to define
the composition of all phases present in the
system. - The variance, F, of a system is the number of
intensive variables that can be changed
independently without disturbing the number of
phases in equilibrium. - F is also the degrees of freedom for a system.
- Gibbs phase rule F C P 2
4One-component Systems
- For a one-component system (e.g. pure water), F
3 - P. - If there is only one phase, F 2 and both p and
T can be varied independently without changing
the number of phases. - If two phases are present in equilibrium F 1,
which means p is not freely variable if T is set,
in fact, a liquid has a characteristic vapour
pressure at a given T. - When three phases are in equilibrium F 0 and
the system is invariant. - This special condition can only be established by
a definite temperature and pressure that is
characteristic of the substance and outside our
control. (Triple point)
5(No Transcript)
6Two-component Systems
- C 2 and F 4 P.
- If T is kept constant, the other remaining F are
p and xA. - Hence, one form of the phase diagram is a map of
pressures and compositions at which each phase is
stable. - The other form is when pressure is kept constant.
Then, the phase diagram is a map of temperatures
and compositions at which each phase is stable.
7Vapour pressure Diagrams
For the partial pressures of the components of an
ideal solution The total vapour pressure at
some fixed temperature changes linearly with the
composition from pB to pAas xA changes from 0
to 1.
8Composition of the Vapour
9Phase Diagrams
Level Ruler la a2 lb a2
10Temperature-composition Diagrams
- Distillation of mixtures (compound A more
volatile than compound B) -
Fractional distillation The efficiency is
expressed in terms of theoretical plates. The
closer the vapour pressures of two substances,
the higher the number of theoretical plates.
11Azeotropes
Mixture is destabilized relative to the ideal
solution, A-B interactions are unfavourable. GE
is , so there may be contributions form both
enthalpy and entropy. Distillation cannot occur
after point b. e.g. Water / ethanol Boils
unchanged when the water content is 4 by mass
and the T 35 oC
Favourable interactions between A-B molecules
stabilize the liquid. GE is -. e.g. Hydrochloric
acid / water Boils unchanged when the water is
80 and T 108.6 oC.
12Immiscible Liquids
- At equilibrium, there is a tiny amount of A
dissolved in B, and similarly a tiny amount of B
dissolved in A. - Total vapour pressure of the mixture is close to
p pA pB. If the T is raised until p pex,
boiling starts and the dissolved substances are
purged from their solution. - This boiling results in a vigorous agitation of
the mixture. - Each component is kept saturated in the other
component. - Purging continues as the very dilute solutions
are replenished.
13Liquid-Liquid Phase Diagrams
- Partially-miscible liquids Liquids that do not
mix in all proportions at all temperatures.
- A is pure, B is added slowly. Its one phase.
- At some mole fraction of B, the two liquids
become immiscible. - Two phases are in equilibrium with each other.
- The most abundant one consisting of A saturated
with B. - The minor one a trace of B saturated with A.
- The relative abundances of the two phases are
given by the lever rule.
14Critical Solution Temperatures
- The upper critical solution temperature, Tuc, is
the highest temperature at which phase separation
occurs. - Greater thermal motion overcomes any potential
energy advantage in molecules of one type being
close together. - Lower critical solution temperature, Tlc, is the
lowest temperature below which they mix in all
proportions and above which they form two phases. - At low temperatures two components form weak
complexes which get disrupted at higher
temperatures. - Some systems may have both Tuc and Tlc.
15Distillation of Partially-miscible Liquids
- Consider a pair of liquids that are partially
miscible and form a low-boiling azeotrope. - This is common as both properties reflect the
tendency of the two kinds molecules to avoid each
other.
Tuc lt Tb at all compositions
- Distillation of a mixture of composition a1 leads
to a vapour of composition b1. - b1 condenses to 1F b2.
- Phase separates only if T is lowered to b3.
b1
a2
vapour
Temperature, T
b2
1F liquid
a1
2F liquid
Mole fraction of A, zA
16- Boiling occurs before two liquids are miscible.
- There is no Tuc.
- System at e1 forms 2F which persist up to boiling
at e2. - The vapour of this mixture is the same as the
liquid. - Condensing a vapour of composition e3 gives a 2F
liquid of the same overall composition. - At a fixed T, the mixture vaporizes and condenses
like a single substance!
17Liquid-solid Phase Diagrams
- a1 to a2 System enters 2F region, liquid B
- Pure solid B begins to come out of solution and
the remaining liquid becomes richer in A. - a2 to a3 More of the solid forms. Relative
amounts are given by the lever rule. - a3 to a4 There is less liquid than at a3, and
its composition is given by e. This liquid now
freezes to give a 2F system of pure B and pure A.
- A liquid with eutectic composition freezes at a
single temperature, without previously depositing
solid A or solid B. - A solid with eutectic composition melts, without
change of composition, at the lowest T of any
mixture.
18Reacting Systems
- A B C and C forms eutectic mixtures with
species A and B. - Excess B is mixed with A to form C. In the end a
binary mixture of B and C remains. - The only difference in the phase diagram is that
the whole phase diagram is squeezed into
compositions of equal amounts of A and B.