Enthelpy of vaporization from Clausius–Clapeyron

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The discussion centers on using the Clausius-Clapeyron equation to calculate the enthalpy of vaporization, raising the question of whether the resulting value is an average over a temperature range. The calculated enthalpy of vaporization for carbon dioxide from 220K to 300K is 16.59 kJ/mol, contrasting with an average value of 11.4 kJ/mol obtained from another method. It is clarified that the value from the Clausius-Clapeyron equation is not a simple average but rather a weighted average due to the temperature dependence of ΔH. Concerns are also raised about the unusual behavior of carbon dioxide potentially affecting the assumptions of the Clausius-Clapeyron equation, specifically regarding liquid volume and ideal gas behavior. Understanding these nuances is crucial for accurate thermodynamic calculations.
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Homework Equations



d ln(Psat) / d (1/T) = -ΔHvap/R (Clausius-Clapeyron)

The Attempt at a Solution



When solving for the enthalpy of vaporization using the Clausius-Clapeyron equation, is the resulting value an average over the temperature range? I assume this is the case, because enthalpy of vaporization is dependent on temperature.

I found the enthalpy of vaporization for carbon dioxide from 220K to 300K to be 16.59 kJ/mol (using the Clausius-Clapeyron equation) and tabulated saturation pressures.

I'm comparing this to the value I get from Hv-Hl=ΔHvap. When I take an average (arithmetic mean) of these values over the same temperature range, I get a value of 11.4 kJ/mol.

Why is there such a difference between using these two methods?
 
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nod32 said:
When solving for the enthalpy of vaporization using the Clausius-Clapeyron equation, is the resulting value an average over the temperature range? I assume this is the case, because enthalpy of vaporization is dependent on temperature.

It is not a simple average. On the left you have a derivative, ΔH is a function of the temperature - so you need to integrate, and integration can be thought of as a weighted average.
 
But if the values are over evenly spaced intervals (say 5K)?

I remember my prof talking about how carbon dioxide can behave unusually (I don't recall under what circumstances). Could this unusual behavior void some of the assumptions that are made in deriving the Clausius-Clapeyron equation?

Which according to my course notes are
-liquid volume<<vapor phase
-vapor phase acts as an ideal gas
 
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