OK, so here's the question:
a) Given that mu = 0.25 K/atm for Nitrogen, calculate the value of its isothermal Joule-Thomson coefficient.
b) Calculate the energy that must be supplied as heat to maintain constant temperature when 15,0 mol N2 flows through a throttle in an isothermal Joule-thomson experiment and the pressure drop is 75atm.
This is what I got so far :
muT = - Cp . mu
Now, the value of mu is given in the Question.
What I would like to know is how do I calculate Cp ?
Can I assume that Cp = 5/2 R ? Since nitrogen is a monoatomic gas.
So, muT = - ( 5/2 ) (8.314510 J/K.mol) x (0.25K/atm)
= - 5,1966J/atm.mol
But at the back of the book the answer is -7,2 J/atm.mol.
How did they get to this?