1 / 24

How is boiling point related to pressure?

How is boiling point related to pressure?. …it’s more than you think!. If you reduce the pressure on a liquid, its boiling point decreases BP H 2 0=100 o C at 760mmHg (1.00 atm, sea level). If you reduce the pressure on a liquid, its boiling point decreases BP H 2 0=100 o C

kane-alston
Download Presentation

How is boiling point related to pressure?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. How is boiling point related to pressure? …it’s more than you think!

  2. If you reduce the pressure on a liquid, its boiling point decreases • BP H20=100oC at 760mmHg (1.00 atm, sea level)

  3. If you reduce the pressure on a liquid, its boiling point decreases • BP H20=100oC at 760mmHg (1.00 atm, sea level) • BP H20=95.1oC at 635mmHg (.836 atm,Denver)

  4. If you reduce the pressure on a liquid, its boiling point decreases • BP C2H50H=78.4oC at 760mmHg (1.00 atm, sea level)

  5. If you reduce the pressure on a liquid, its boiling point decreases • BP C2H50H=78.4oC at 760mmHg (1.00 atm, sea level) • BP C2H50H=63.5oC at 400mmHg (.526 atm,way high)

  6. Consider a phase diagram • Pop Quiz—What substance?

  7. Line 1-5 represents increasing the pressure at 0oC • Line 6-9 represents warming at 1.00 atm.

  8. The slope of the left hand line shows that the substance is water (that and the normal melting point) • The item of interest today is the slope of the right hand line— How does the boiling point respond to pressure?

  9. Compare

  10. Compare • Yes, I know the MP and BP are different. Look at the slopes

  11. Water has a steeper liquid/gas line • Carbon dioxide has a shallower liquid/gas line

  12. Water has a steeper liquid/gas line --its boiling point changes (↔) only a little with changes in pressure (↨) • Carbon dioxide has a shallower liquid/gas line • --its boiling point changes more with changes in pressure

  13. Why?

  14. Why? • Because water has a largeheat of vaporization

  15. The Clausius-Clayperon equation • --relates heat of vaporization to changes in vapor pressure at different temperatures • --If a small change in T makes a big change in vapor pressure, the substance is easy to boil (low Hvap)

  16. Ln P = -DHvap/R (1/T) + C • P is the pressure (any units) • ln P is the natural log of P • DHvap is the heat of vaporization in J/mol • R is the ideal gas constant 8.31 J/mol k • T is the absolute temperature

  17. Please notice: • Don’t use P • Don’t use T

  18. Please notice: • Don’t use P, use ln P • Don’t use T, use 1/T

  19. Please notice: • Don’t use P, use ln P • Don’t use T, use 1/T • This is a linear relationship • The slope of the line is -DHvap/R

  20. Clausius-Clayperon graph (c) Ln P 1/T Slope=DHvap/R

  21. There are two ways this equation is used • --to find the heat of vaporization of a substance • You will need two sets of (T,VP) data • Convert to (1/T,lnP), graph, find the slope, and solve OR • Calculate by difference

  22. There are two ways this equation is used • --to find the normal boiling point • You will need one set of (T,VP) data, and Hvap • Convert to (1/T,lnP), graph, calculate the slope, and extend the line to ln(1atm) OR • Calculate C and use with ln(1atm) to find 1/T, solve for T

  23. What is the heat of vaporization? • Acetic Acid has the following vapor pressures: 10 mmHg at 17.5oC 40 mmHg at 43.0oC • Ammonia has the following vapor pressures: 100 mmHg at -68.4oC 760 mmHg at -33.6oC

  24. What is the normal boiling point? • The vapor pressure of Hg is 100 mmHg at 1784oC. Its heat of vaporization is 259 kJ/mol • VP of N2=10mmHg at -219oC, • DHvap=5.58 kJ/mol

More Related