AbhiNature said:
Hi All,
I tried to find entropy of liquid nitrogen in various data books, using nitrogen's CAS number, MSDS, but I was able to get the entropy of nitrogen till only 100K, not below that.
Does anyone know what's the entropy of liquid nitrogen or that where can I find it?
Thanks!
The boiling point of liquid nitrogen at 1 atmosphere was 77°K. Therefore, you have gotten the value of the entropy at pressures above 1 Atmosphere. Regardless, there is a way to estimate the entropy at whatever pressure you are assuming.
I suggest the following approximation to extrapolate the value of the entropy below 100°K. The approximation won't be valid for temperatures far below 100° K, but it should be valid within a limited range of 100°K.
Hypothesize that the specific heat of liquid nitrogen is constant. Furthermore, hypothesize that assume that the liquid nitrogen is being cooled down from 100K at whatever pressure you got that value of entropy from.
The specific heat at constant pressure is defined as C_P where,
C_P=[T∂S/∂T]_P
You can look up C_P for liquid nitrogen in tables. Since C_P is almost constant for liquids, it doesn't matter precisely.
T is the temperature, S is the entropy and P is the pressure.
If you assume that C_P is constant, then you can integrate this equation easily.
ΔS=(C_P)ln(T/100°K)
where ΔS is the
change in entropy, T is the new temperature and,
ΔS=S(T)-S(100°K)
Putting the two equations together,
S(T)=S(100°K)+(C_P)ln(T/100°K)
You say you have S(100°K), and you can look up C_P. Thus, you can estimate the entropy at any temperature, i.e., S(T).
Here are some hints.
Note "ln" is the Neparian logarithm, or the "natural logarithm".
The difficult part may be finding the best value of C_P.
For a liquid, there is very little difference between C_P or C_V. The specific heat at constant pressure is almost the same as the specific heat at constant volume for a liquid. So if your table gives you C_V instead of C_P, just use it.
As I said, C_P is almost constant over a large temperature range for a liquid. Similarly, it will be constant over a limited pressure range for a liquid. Therefore, if you can only find C_P at 77°K, use it.
Final hint: There may be something wrong with your value of S(100°K).
Check very carefully whether that CAS number is really for 100°K or 77°K. The standard tables prefer values at 1 Atmosphere. Your question implies a larger value of pressure, which is possible. However, check.
You may have found the entropy of gaseous nitrogen at 100°K. This will not work.
Also note that all this is based on an approximation. One must be wary of approximations. However, this hypothesis is probably the best estimate possible given the limited information in your problem.