Understanding Enthalpy and Temperature in Ideal Gas Systems

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The discussion centers on the calculation of enthalpy (H) for ideal gases, specifically addressing the formula H = U + PV, where U is the internal energy. It clarifies that while H = 3nRT/2 + nRT is valid for monatomic gases, diatomic gases require adjustments due to varying specific heats, leading to H = 5nRT/2 + nRT or H = 7nRT/2 + nRT at different temperatures. The conversation also highlights that the ideal gas model may not accurately represent complex gases like R-134a, especially at higher temperatures. Additionally, it emphasizes the importance of using constant specific heats only within certain temperature ranges and integrating when they vary. Overall, the thread provides insights into the complexities of enthalpy calculations for different types of gases.
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I know enthalpy

H = U + PV

and for ideal gas, PV = nRT so it becomes

H = U + nRT

However, U = 3NkT/2 = 3nRT/2 for ideal gas as well.

So why is it incorrect to put

H = 3nRT/2 + nRT ??

Thanks
 
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Rizer said:
I know enthalpy

H = U + PV

and for ideal gas, PV = nRT so it becomes

H = U + nRT

However, U = 3NkT/2 = 3nRT/2 for ideal gas as well.

So why is it incorrect to put

H = 3nRT/2 + nRT ??

Thanks
It is correct for a monatomic ideal gas (only).

AM
 
Thanks Andrew, but what about using H = 5nRT/2 + nRT or H = 7nRT/2 + nRT etc. for ideal gases made up of molecules?
 
Rizer said:
Thanks Andrew, but what about using H = 5nRT/2 + nRT or H = 7nRT/2 + nRT etc. for ideal gases made up of molecules?
For non-monatomic ideal gas, the specific heat will depend upon temperature. A diatomic ideal gas will have a Cv of 5R/2 at temperatures below around 1000K but as temperatures increase the Cv increases and eventually reaches 7R/2

AM
 
But why does the graphs of Enthalpy usually depends on both T and P? Is it solely because the gas is not an ideal gas??

The Enthalpy graph I found:
http://www.nt.ntnu.no/users/haugwarb/Phase_diagrams_and_thermodynamic_tables/PhaseDiagrams/R134a.pdf


I also found this example:
http://www.learnthermo.com/examples/ch05/p-5c-3.php

In EQN 4, the example applied the equation of state for ideal gas, so I suppose it is treating the gas as an ideal gas.
But when I try to calculate the enthalpy using H = (3 or 5 or 7)nRT/2 + nRT, the values mismatch the value of H1 = 87.41 kJ/kg and H2 = 239.78 kJ/kg in the example, even after converting kJ/mol into kJ/kg using the provided molar mass of 29g/mole...


Please help me on this, this issue has been troubling me for long, thank you very much
 
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The Enthalpy graph I found:
This graph is for water liquid/vapor. Clearly not an ideal gas! :smile:
I also found this example:
How do your answers for H compare to the values given in http://www.wiley.com/college/moran/CL_0471465704_S/user/tables/TABLE5S/table5sframe.html" table for air? (Note that everything in the table is in Kelvin except for the first column!
 
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Rizer said:
I know enthalpy

H = U + PV

and for ideal gas, PV = nRT so it becomes

H = U + nRT

However, U = 3NkT/2 = 3nRT/2 for ideal gas as well.

So why is it incorrect to put

H = 3nRT/2 + nRT ??

Thanks

For an ideal gas,

R = cp - cv

This is entirely consistent with writing

u = cvT

and

h = cpT

although you should be cautious to use these formulas only in the regime where the specific heats are constant. In the more general case, cv = du/dT and cp = dh/dT. If the specific heats are not constant, you have to integrate from some reference temperature.

The formula you wrote with cv=(3/2)R is only appropriate for monatomic ideal gases. As you point out, for diatomic ideal gases, the coefficient is 5/2 because of the extra degrees of freedom available at room temperature, although as the temperature rises above ~1E3 K for gases like O2 and N2, additional modes become unfrozen and cv/R rises. At some point the ideal gas model doesn't work all that well. I would point out that complex gases like R-134 aren't all that well-modeled by the ideal gas law.

BBB
 
Bill_K said:
This graph is for water liquid/vapor. Clearly not an ideal gas! :smile:

How do your answers for H compare to the values given in http://www.wiley.com/college/moran/CL_0471465704_S/user/tables/TABLE5S/table5sframe.html" table for air? (Note that everything in the table is in Kelvin except for the first column!

Thanks alot! Now I am clear about the concept.

I tried to calculate h using the table you provided, and the values matched well with the formula H = 5nRT/2 + nRT

bbbeard said:
For an ideal gas,

R = cp - cv

This is entirely consistent with writing

u = cvT

and

h = cpT

although you should...

Thanks for your detailed explanations, which furthers my understandings on this topic. And now I am sure that R-134a can't be modeled as an ideal gas.
 
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