PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY IN BRIEF

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CHAP. 2: STATE BEHAVIOUR [CONTENTS] 60

2.4.3 Ideal mixture


A mixture that obeys Amagat’s law at all temperatures and pressures is defined as anideal
mixture. It often serves as a standard state used to calculate thermodynamic quantities of
real mixtures. [see6.1].


Note:Amagat’s law can be applied to both gaseous and liquid mixtures, and to mixtures
in the solid state.

2.4.4 Pseudocritical quantities


The theorem of corresponding states2.2.9can be also used for mixtures if we substitute the
critical quantities bypseudocritical quantities. Pseudocritical quantities of a mixture are
calculated from the critical quantities of its components. The simplest relations were suggested
by Kay:


Tc′=

∑k

j=1

xjTc,j, p′c=

∑k

j=1

xjpc,j, Vc′=

∑k

j=1

xjRTc,j/pc,j. (2.41)

Example
The critical temperature and pressure of substance A are given asTc= 400K,pc= 4MPa, and
those of substance B asTc= 200K,pc = 6MPa. Calculate the pseudocritical temperature,
pseudocritical pressure and pseudocritical volume of a mixture containing 40 moles percent of
substance A.

Solution
We substitute into equations (2.41), where the mole fraction of substance A is 0.4, and that of
substance B is 0.6.

Tc′= 0. 4 ×400 + 0. 6 ×200 = 280K,

p′c= 0. 4 ×4 + 0. 6 ×6 = 5. 2 MPa,

Vc′= 0. 4

8. 314 × 400

4

+ 0. 6 ×

8. 314 × 200

2

= 498. 84 cm^3 mol−^1.
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