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Hello, new member here. I am a physicist and have a need for some chemistry calculations. I would appreciate your review of the following calculations and your commentary on any of it. Thank you.
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This is a calculation of the pressure increase in a pressure vessel which is heated externally. There is some paper-like material inside the vessel which will combust until the oxygen in the vessel is depleted. My intention is to estimate the increase in pressure, including the effects of heat and increase in gas molecules.
A couple of comments: (1) This is a calculation only, we will not be doing this experimentally... no worries. (2) An estimate is acceptable; an answer within 30% or 40% would be fine.
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Initial air inside vessel, mole fraction:
Nitrogen 0.78
Oxygen 0.21
Argon etc 0.01
Ideal Gas Law PV = nRT
n/V [=] moles/L (has units of)
n/V = P/RT
Example, for Nitrogen:
(.78 atm)/[(.08206 L.atm/K.mol)(0+273)K] = .035 moles/L N2
where 0 C has been chosen as standard temperature.
Result:
.035 moles/L N2
.0094 moles/L O2
.00045 moles/L Argon etc
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The volume of the vessel is V = 3.5 L
So initially,
.123 moles N2
.033 moles O2
.0016 moles Argon etc
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Treat the paper-like material as cellulose: C6H10O5
Molecular weight: 162.14 g/mole
Assume there is about 1/4 lb = 113 g of paper-like material in the vessel:
113 g / (162 g/mole) = 0.70 mole cellulose
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Assume complete combustion:
C6H10O5 + 6O2 = 6CO2 + 5H2O
.0055 moles, .033 moles, .033 moles, .028 moles
The moles listed above were determined per:
There is only .033 moles of O2 in the closed vessel; once that is depleted, combustion must cease.
Cellulose will lose 1/6 as many moles as O2 = (1/6)(.033) = .0055
CO2 moles created match O2 moles used.
H2O moles = (5/6)(.033) = .028
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The ideal gas law PV=nRT may be written
P = nRT/V = (n.total)RT/V = (na+nb+...)RT/V = (na)RT/V + (nb)RT/V + ... = pa + pb +...
So the pressure is the sum of the partial pressures of the individual gases.
For the initial gas mix: n1 = n.total.initial = .123 moles N2 + .033 moles O2 + .0016 moles Argon etc = .158 moles
For the final gas mix: n2 = n.total.final = .123 moles N2 + .033 moles CO2 + .028 moles H2O + .0016 moles Argon etc = .186 moles
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PV = nRT
We have P/(nT) = R/V = constant
P1/(n1T1) = P2/(n2T2)
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Assume the vessel is heated externaly to 1250 C:
P2 = (n2/n1)(T2/T1)P1 = (.186/.158) [(1250+273)/(0+273)] P1 = 6.6 P1
Assume initial pressure was 29.92 inHg = 14.7 psi (with apologies for the mixed units, but I've been careful within the formulas--it's the same ratio of temperatures using British units of Rankine rather than Kelvin)
P2 = 6.6 P1 = 97 psi
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So... heating the vessel expands the gases inside, increasing the internal pressure. Less than 10% of the paper-like material combusts, using up all of the oxygen in the vessel, increasing the internal pressure by less than 20%. The initial 14.7 psi internal pressure reaches a maximum of 97 psi. This assumes that the vessel and contents are actually heated to 1250 C and that the combustion that occurs is complete combustion.
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I will probably re-work this with a standard temperature of 70 F.
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How does this look--do you see any bad assumptions or incorrect applications of the theory? Thank you in advance, your input is very much appreciated.
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