Hi all,
I am having lots of trouble working something out (I am waiting on a prescribed text book which was ordered 6 weeks ago which doesn't help)
any help would be greatly appreciated.
The question reads as follows:The standard Gibbs energy of reaction for the decomposition of water
H
2O
(g) --> H
2(g) + 1/2 O
2(g)is 135.2 kJ/mol at 2000K. Suppose that steam at 350 kPa is passed through a furnace tube at 2000K. Calculate the mole fraction of H2(g) in the output gas stream.
My working so far: delta G
orxn = 135.2 kJ/mol (at 2000K), (i dont understand how this can be the
standard gibbs energy when the temperature and pressure is non-standard (2000K)
make sense or am i just dense?)
P
total = P
H20 = 350 kPa = 3.5 bar
T = 2000K
mole fraction of H2(g) = X
H2 = n
H2 / n
total = V
H2 / V
total(n = moles)
P
H2 = (X
H2)*(P
total)
X
H2 = P
H2 / P
total = P
H2 / P
H2OAll I could think of to do was to calculate the equilibrium constant for this reaction from the Gibbs energy value given and then evaluate the constant in terms of partial pressures...
delta G
orxn = - RT ln K
and
K = e
(delta Gorxn / -RT) = e
(135200 J.mol-1 / (- 8.3145 J.K-1.mol-1 * 2000 K)) =2.945*10
-4The equilibrium constant expression in terms of partial pressures....
K ~ Kp = (((P
H2)(P
O2)
1/2) / PH2O)(P
o)
-delta nP
o = standard pressure = 1 bar
delta n for the reaction:
aA --> bB + cC
is equal to: c + d - a
for the decomposition of water: delta n = 1 + 0.5 - 1 = 0.5
Here is where I get stuck because i don't have all the variables needed in order to calculate P
H2, the closest i can get is as follows:
(P
H2)(P
O2)
1/2 = (P
H20)(K) / ((P
o)
- delta n)
= (3.5 bar)(2.945*10
-4) / ((1 bar)
-1/2)
=1.031*10
-3 bar
1.5I'm tempted to just put:
X
H2 = (1 - (X
O2 + X
H2O))
But i don't think it would go down too well...
Any ideas or hints would be extremely helpful.
Cheers,
Mad