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Topic: Henry's Law  (Read 6568 times)

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jj

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Henry's Law
« on: March 17, 2005, 07:16:13 PM »
I'm trying to solve a problem involving a gas with a H constant of 70.....If sampling a water sample with this gas dissolved in it, is it best to fill a serum bottle and remove headspace, replacing with N2, letting it equilibrate and then sampling for the gas-OR to remove a water sample, placing in another (N2 only) bottle and letting that equilibrate?  Seems as if I would need to know the pressure in the bottles- how is this measured....Only info Ihave is that the gas is SF6 and the H constant is 70.  Question is to calculate how the gas conc in headspace changes in both bottles as the solution ( gas in water) conc changes...Boy I have no idea.  

Offline Donaldson Tan

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Re:Henry's Law
« Reply #1 on: March 17, 2005, 07:59:29 PM »
Henry's Law states that the vapour pressure of a component is directly proportional to the mole fraction of the component in a solution, ie.
yAP = H.xA.P* where:
yA is mole fraction of component in gas phase
P: total pressure of gas phase
H: henry's constant
xA is mole fraction of component in solution phase
P* is saturated vapour pressure of the component

P* can be obtained using the antoine equation:
lg P* = A + B/(C + DT)  where A, B, C. D are constants unique to the substance. and T is the temperature of the system. These values can be looked up in standard data tables.
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