Title: 9. LLE Calculations
19. LLE Calculations
- For two liquid phases at equilibrium
- the fugacity of each component in
- the phases must be equal.
- For the binary case shown
- are the two relationships that
- govern the partitioning of species
- 1 and 2 between the two phases.
2Binary LLE Separations
- The equivalent of a VLE flash calculation can be
carried out on liquid-liquid systems. - Given T, P and the overall composition of the
system - F, z1, z2
- Find La, x1a, x2a
- Lb, x1b, x2b
3Binary LLE Separations - Governing Eqn
- Solving these problems requires a series of
material balances - Using a unit feed as our basis, an overall
material balance yields - (A)
- A material balance on component 1 give us
- (B)
- Substituting for Lb from A into equation B
- (C)
- An analogous material balance on component 2,
yields - (D)
- We have two equations (C,D) and three unknowns
(La, x1a and x1b). - We need an equilibrium relationship between xia
and xib
4Binary LLE Separations - Governing Eqn
- Our LLE expression is
- (14.10)
- or
- and (E)
- The governing equation we require to solve the
problem is generated from a final material
balance on one of the liquid phases - (F)
- Substituting equations C, D, E into the material
balance F gives us the final equation
5Solving Binary LLE Separation Problems
- Given T, P,F, z1, z2 Find La, x1a, x2a
- Lb, x1b, x2b
- The solution procedure follows that of binary VLE
flash calculations very closely. - You can immediately solve for x1a and x1b using
the LLE relationships - Or
- You can solve the governing equation by
iteration, starting with estimates of x1a and x1b
to determine activity coefficients, and refining
these estimates and La by successive substitution.
6Vapour-Liquid-Liquid Equilibrium (VLLE)
- In some cases we observe
- VLLE, in which three
- phases exist at
- equilibrium.
- F 2 - p C
- 2 - 3 2 1
- Therefore, at a given P,
- all intensive variables
- are fixed, and we have
- a single point on a binary
- Tx,x,y diagram
7Vapour-Liquid-Liquid Equilibrium (VLLE)
- At a given T, we can
- create Px,x,y diagrams
- if we have a good
- activity coefficient
- model.
- Note the weak
- dependence of the
- liquid phase
- compositions on the
- system pressure.
810. Chemical Reaction Equilibrium SVNA 15
- If sufficient data exists, we can describe the
equilibrium state of a reacting system. - If the system is able to lower its Gibbs energy
through a change in its composition, this
reaction is favourable. - However, this does not imply that the reaction
will occur in a finite period of time. This is a
question of reaction kinetics. - There are several industrially important
reactions that are both rapid and equilibrium
limited. - Synthesis gas reaction
- production of methyl-t-butyl ether (MBTE)
- In these processes, it is necessary to know the
thermodynamic limit of the reaction extent under
given conditions.
9Reaction Extent
- Given a feed composition for a reactive system,
we are most interested in the degree of
conversion of reactants into products. - A concise measure is the reaction extent, e.
- Consider the following reaction
- In terms of stoichiometric coefficients
- where, nCH4 -1, nH20 -1, nCO 1, nH2 3
- For any change in composition due to this
reaction, - 15.2
- where de is called the differential extent of
reaction.
10Reaction Extent
- Another form of the reaction extent is
- (i1,2,,N) 15.3
- The second part of our definition of reaction
extent is that it equals zero prior to the
reaction. - Given that we are interested in the reaction
extent, and not its differential, we integrate
15.3 from the initial, unreacted state to any
reacted state of interest - or
- 15.4
11Reaction Extent and Mole Fractions
- Translating the reaction extent into mole
fractions is accomplished by calculating the
total number of moles in the system at the given
state. - Where,
- Mole fractions for all species are derived from
- 15.5
12Multiple Reactions and the Reaction Extent
- The reaction extent approach can be generalized
to accommodate two or more independent,
simultaneous reactions. - For j reactions of N components
- (i1,2,,N)
- and the number of moles of each component for
given reaction extents is - 15.6
- and the total number of moles in the system
becomes - where we can write
13Chemical Reaction Equilibrium Criteria
- To determine the state of a
- reactive system at equilibrium,
- we need to relate the reaction
- extent to the total Gibbs
- energy, GT.
- We have seen that GT of a
- closed system at T,P
- reaches a minimum at
- an equilibrium state
- Eq. 14.4
14Reaction Extent and Gibbs Energy
- For the time being, consider a single phase
system in which chemical reactions are possible. - The changes in Gibbs energy resulting from shifts
in temperature, pressure and composition are
described by the fundamental equation - At constant temperature and pressure, this
reduces to - and the only means the
system has to lower the Gibbs - energy is to alter the number of moles of
individual - components.
- What remains is to translate changes in moles to
the reaction extent.
15Criterion for Chemical Equilibrium
- For a single chemical reaction, we can apply
equation 15.3 which relates the reaction extent
to the changes in the number of moles - 15.3
- Substituting for dni in the fundamental equation
yields - At equilibrium, we know that d(nG)T,P, 0.
Therefore, for the above equation to hold at any
reaction extent, we require that - 15.8
16Reaction Equilibrium and Chemical Potential
- We have developed a criterion for chemical
equilibrium in terms the chemical potentials of
components. - 15.8
- While this criterion is complete, it is not in a
useable form. - Recall our definition of fugacity which applies
to any species in any phase (vapour, liquid,
solid) - In dealing with reaction equilibria, we need to
pay particular attention to the reference state,
Gi(T). We can assign a standard state, Gio, as
17Standard States 4.4 SVNA
- For our purposes, the Gibbs energy at standard
conditions is of greatest interest. - This is the molar Gibbs energy of
- pure component i
- at the reaction temperature
- in a user-defined phase
- at a user-defined pressure (often 1 bar)
- A great deal of thermodynamic data are published
as the standard properties of formation at STP
(Table C.4 of the text) - DGfo is standard Gibbs energy of formation per
mole of the compound when formed from its
elements in its standard state at 25oC. - Gases pure, ideal gas at 1 bar
- Liquids pure substance at 1 bar
18Chemical Potential and Activity
- Substituting our standard Gibbs energy (Gio) in
the place of Gi(T), the chemical potential of
component i in our system becomes - 15.9
- We define a new parameter, activity, to simplify
this expression - 15.11
- where,
- The activity of a component is the ratio of its
mixture fugacity to its pure component fugacity
at the standard state.
19Reaction Equilibrium and Activity
- When a reactive system reaches an equilibrium
state, we know that the equilibrium criterion is
satisfied. Recall that chemical reaction
equilibrium requires - where ni is the stoichiometric coefficient of
component i and mi is the chemical potential of
component i at the given P,T, and composition. - Substituting our expression for chemical
equilibrium into the above equation gives us - Or,
20The Equilibrium Constant
- Our equilibrium expression for reactive systems
can be expressed concisely in the form - 15.12
- where P signifies the product over all species.
- The right hand side of equation 15.12 is a
function of pure component properties alone, and
is therefore constant at a given temperature. - The equilibrium constant, K, for the reaction is
defined as - 15.13
- K is calculated from the standard Gibbs energies
of the pure components and the stoichiometric
coefficients of the reaction.
21Standard Gibbs Energy Change of Reaction
- The conventional means of representing the
equilibrium constant uses DGo, the standard Gibbs
energy change the reaction. - Using this notation, our equilibrium constant
assumes the familiar form - 15.14
- When calculating an equilibrium constant (or
interpreting a literature value), pay attention
to standard state conditions. - Each Gio must represent the pure component at the
temperature of interest - The state of the component and the pressure are
arbitrary, but they must correspond with fio used
to calculate the activity of the component in the
mixture.
22Temp. Dependence of Reaction Equilibrium
- Defined by the following relationship,
- the equilibrium constant is a function of
temperature. - Recall that DGo represents the standard Gibbs
energy of reaction at the specified temperature. - We know that 15.15
- From which we can derive the temperature
dependence of K - 15.16
- If we assume that DHo is independent of
temperature, we can integrate 15.16 directly to
yield - 15.17
23K vs Temperature
- Equation 15.17 predicts that ln K
- versus 1/T is linear. This is based on
- the assumption that DHo is a weak
- function of temperature over the
- range of interest.
- This is true for a number of
- reactions, including those
- depicted by Figure15.2.
- A rigorous development of
- temperature dependence
- of K may be found in the text
- (Equation 15.20)
24Equilibrium State of a Reactive System
- Given that an equilibrium constant for a reaction
can be derived from the standard state Gibbs
energies of the pure components, we can define
the composition of the system at equilibrium. - 15.13
- Consider the gas phase reaction
- The equilibrium constant gives us
- Or
-