- #1
maistral
- 240
- 17
Hello. I would like to inquire as to how to deal with the said topic title.
I'm trying to generate a VLE graph for ethylene oxide-water. While I know that EO will quickly vaporize since the boiling point of EO is quite low, I'm still trying to generate a VLE using SRK.
So while the vapor root is converging, the liquid root won't.
Upon inspection (and using taylor expansion of the third degree to simplify the equation), I noticed that the two roots (the liquid root and the useless middle root) converge in the complex domain. Does this have a physical meaning?
I'm trying to generate a VLE graph for ethylene oxide-water. While I know that EO will quickly vaporize since the boiling point of EO is quite low, I'm still trying to generate a VLE using SRK.
So while the vapor root is converging, the liquid root won't.
Upon inspection (and using taylor expansion of the third degree to simplify the equation), I noticed that the two roots (the liquid root and the useless middle root) converge in the complex domain. Does this have a physical meaning?