Title of article :
A hard-sphere volume-translated van der Waals equation of state for supercritical process modeling 1. Pure components
Author/Authors :
Kutney، نويسنده , , Michael C and Dodd، نويسنده , , Vivek S and Smith، نويسنده , , Kenneth A and Herzog، نويسنده , , Howard J and Tester، نويسنده , , Jefferson W، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1997
Pages :
23
From page :
149
To page :
171
Abstract :
An equation of state (EOS) has been developed to model thermodynamic properties of pure species and mixtures from ambient to supercritical conditions. It has been developed for use in modeling supercritical water oxidation (SCWO) of liquid and slurried organic wastes. Kinetic and flow simulations of the SCWO process require accurate predictions of densities (errors ± 10% or less) and other thermodynamic properties from ambient to supercritical conditions of water (25°C < T ≤ 600°C; 1 bar < P ≤ 300 bar). Over these temperature and pressure ranges, EOSs proposed by other investigators have been unsuccessful in estimating accurate properties such as fluid densities, vapor pressures, residual enthalpies and residual entropies for water and aqueous mixtures containing carbon dioxide, nitrogen, organics and oxygen. Some improvement has been achieved using volume translation methods with cubic equations of state, but even these EOSs have limited accuracy for predicting densities. The proposed pure-component EOS couples a volume translation to a pressure-explicit equation in volume and temperature that combines a Carnahan-Starling hard-sphere repulsive term b and a simple van der Waals attraction term a. The translation constant t is determined by a fit to liquid and vapor coexistence density data while a and b are determined from critical point data. The focus of this paper is on the analysis of pure components for which the proposed EOS is shown to fit a number of important thermodynamic properties to within average deviations of 1–30% over a wide range of conditions for ammonia, carbon dioxide, ethylene, methane, nitrogen, oxygen and water.
Keywords :
Thermodynamic properties , equation of state , Organic waste treatment , Supercritical water oxidation , process modeling
Journal title :
Fluid Phase Equilibria
Serial Year :
1997
Journal title :
Fluid Phase Equilibria
Record number :
1980644
Link To Document :
بازگشت