Physical Chemistry Third Edition

(C. Jardin) #1

246 6 The Thermodynamics of Solutions


graph, and a temperature–composition diagram is created by passing a plane of con-
stant pressure though the three-dimensional graph. The intersection of these two planes
contains the common tie line of the two diagrams, as shown in the figure.
A constant-pressuredistillationprocess can be described using the temperature–
composition phase diagram, as depicted in Figure 6.5. Pointaon the diagram in this
figure represents the composition of a liquid solution that is being boiled in the still.
Pointb, at the other end of the tie line, represents the composition of the vapor at
equilibrium with this liquid. This vapor condenses at the temperature represented by
pointc. A simple still in which this process can be carried out is said to have one
theoretical plate. A still can be made to produce a greater separation of the components
by packing its column with glass beads or other objects. The liquid condenses on the
glass beads part way up the column and then evaporates again, making this part of
the column equivalent to one theoretical plate. For the process beginning at pointa,
a second evaporation at pointcleads to a vapor with the composition at pointd, and
this vapor can condense still further up the column, giving a liquid corresponding to
pointe. This process corresponds to two theoretical plates. Three theoretical plates lead
to a liquid with the composition at pointg. A still with a large number of theoretical
plates can lead to a condensate that is almost entirely made up of the more volatile
component. A “spinning-band” still has a rotating helical wire screen that wipes the
walls of the column and can provide several hundred theoretical plates.

Vapor

T/

K

400

390

380

370

360

350

340
0

a b
c d
e f
g

0.2
Mole fraction of benzene

0.4 0.6 0.8 10

Liquid

1st
theoretical
plate 2nd
theoretical
plate

3rd
theoretical
plate

Figure 6.5 Diagram Representing a
Constant-Pressure Distillation Pro-
cess. Each theoretical plate corres-
ponds to one step in the “staircase.”

Exercise 6.7
Estimate from Figure 6.5 the composition and boiling temperature of the condensate produced
from the liquid at pointaby a still with three theoretical plates.

A two-component solid–liquid phase diagram is similar to a liquid–vapor phase
diagram if the solids are miscible. Figure 6.6 shows the temperature–composition
phase diagram of silicon and germanium, which form a nearly ideal solid solution and
a nearly ideal liquid solution. The area below the lower curve represents one-phase solid
solutions, and the area above the upper curve represents one-phase liquid solutions. The
area between the curves is a tie-line region, with the two ends of a tie line representing
the compositions of the solid phase and the liquid phase at equilibrium with each other.
A continuation of the silicon–germanium diagram to higher temperatures leads to the
liquid–vapor transition region, giving a diagram with two areas of tie lines, as shown
in Figure 6.7.

1750
1700
1650
1600
1550
1500
T/K^1450
1400
1350
1300
1250
1200
1150
0 0.2
Mole fraction of Si

0.4 0.6 0.8 10

Figure 6.6 The Solid–Liquid Tem-
perature–Composition Phase Diag-
ram of Silicon and Germanium.Since
both the solid and liquid phases are
nearly ideal solutions, this diagram
resembles the liquid–vapor phase dia-
gram of an ideal liquid solution. From
C. D. Thurmond,J. Phys. Chem., 57 , 827
(1953).

Maximum Solubilities in Ideal Solutions


Benzene and naphthalene form a nearly ideal liquid solution. However, these two
substances are nearly insoluble in each other’s solid phase since they cannot both fit into
a single crystal lattice. Figure 6.8 schematically shows the vapor pressure and chemical
potential of naphthalene in a liquid solution with benzene near room temperature. The
standard state of naphthalene for the liquid solution is supercooled liquid naphthalene,
which has a higher chemical potential than solid naphthalene. There is a range of mole
fractions of naphthalene near unity in which the chemical potential of naphthalene in the
solution would exceed that of the solid naphthalene. The mole fraction of naphthalene at
which its chemical potential equals that of the solid represents themaximum solubility
of naphthalene in a solution with benzene. A solution with this composition is said
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