Hi,
I am a little confused about the following. An unknown chemical compound, X, has a molar mass of 74 g/mol, a liquid density of 1.14 g/mL, and obeys the phase diagram illustrated below. Suppose you execute the following two steps:
Step 1: 6.32-g of X(l) is injected into an initially evacuated 3.0-L container at 200-K.
Step 2: The equilibrated sample from step 1 is compressed to half its original volume while the temperature remains constant at 200-K.
(a) Describe what happens to the system immediately following each of the two steps.
1) I am slightly confused on this. I used PV=nRT to find the pressure conditions in the container immediately after step 1. So after step 1, I have P=nRT/V
P=(6.32-g/74g/mol)(0.0821)(200-K) / 3-L
P=0.467 atm
On the phase diagram for that pressure and temperature, it is in the gas phase. Am I correct in saying that the sample exists as a gas and will STAY AS as a gas under this same condition of pressure and temperature provided the container is sealed and not disturbed?
2) After step 2, since the V is halved, the pressure INITIALLY will be doubled, so 0.467atm * 2= 0.934atm. According to the phase diagram, that combination of pressure and temperature exists in the liquid phase, so does all of the sample condense to a liquid INITIALLY?
3) However, since the temperature is still the same, the system will eventually equilibrate, right? My question is, where does it equlibrate to? Does it equilibrate to T=200-K and P=0.75 atm (the place at T=200-K where liquid and gas exist in equilibrium)? If it does equilibrate there, I am confused as to how the pressure just "comes to" be 0.75 atm. Do systems usually just equilibrate to the equilibrium lines in phase diagrams?
Sorry for the simplicity of the questions, This was on a worksheet I found, but I can't find anywhere in my textbook that really relates phase diagrams to these types of problems. Thanks so much!
Ryan