Hey. Ive just started taking my first course in chemical engineering thermodynamics, and come across something that im a little confused about. I am reading about systems that contain two phases of the same pure substance, and how we need only one intensive property in a single phase to determine all other intensive properties of that phase. It then goes on with an example of water in a liquid-vapor state showing that if we know the pressure of the water is 1atm, we can determine the temperature of the water, internal energy etc. What i am a bit lost with is how we can describe the water with a single pressure value. Will the pressure in the water not depend on how deep into the water we are? Am i missing something?
Thanks in advance,
Dan.