Professional Documents
Culture Documents
There are three common phases of matter: solid, liquid and gas. A substance can exist in a particular phase or phases under a given set of conditions like temperature, pressure and composition.
In this exercise, the pressure was held constant and the system was considered to be condensed. Thus reducing the equation to: F= C P + 1
Thermal analysis
technique used to construct phase diagrams by relating it to the substances cooling curves From this system, a eutectic temperature (TE) can be found at which the phases can co-exist in equilibrium at fixed pressure
The eutectic composition (XE) and eutectic temperature (TE) are given by the intersection of the two liquid curves.
The curves in graph (b) are plots of temperature against time obtained when liquid solutions of various compositions are allowed to cool.
Arrest Temperature
When the composition of the system reached the eutectic composition, component B begins to form together with A where the two continue to solidify at the eutectic temperature until no liquid remains, thus arrest occurs.
Objectives
Construct cooling curves of naphthalenediphenylamine system Construct Binary solid-liquid phase diagram for the naphthalene-diphenylamine system from cooling curves
Objectives
Determine Breaks and arrest temperature from the phase diagram Determine eutectic temperature and eutectic composition
Methodology
A amount of diphenylamine and B amount of naphthalene Place into a test-tube Place in a hot-bath to aid dissolution
Run No. mass of A mass of B 1 0 5.07 2 1 5.07 3 1.5 5.07 4 2.5 5.07 5 5 5.07
6
7 8
5.03
5.03 5.03
0
1.01 0.675
Maintain temperature for specific run * Place test-tube with thermometer into the set-up, fill with ice Read temperature every 10 seconds until 20o C or arrest curve is obtained
Repeat for two trials except for runs 4 and 5 For the next run, use previous set-up and just add the necessary amounts A and B Record data Dispose set-up by reheating, until melted then dispose at appropriate waste bin
Experimental Set - up
Pure substance will have no breaks since it is only characteristic to mixtures so the cooling curves of naphthalene (run 1) and diphenylamine (run 6) consist of a single halt at the temperature corresponding to their melting point
Observation
As the liquid solution cools at fast pace until solid appear. At this time, the rate of cooling is observed as slightly decreasing while the solids begin to fully form. At this point, the mixture approaches the eutectic composition.
Observation
When this point was reached, the rest of the solution solidifies which gives a constant temperature. The solid begins to cool leading to another increase in rate of cooling until the mixture has completely solidified and a second rate of cooling occurred.
From the various set of cooling curves, a liquidus portion of a phase diagram was obtained by plotting the break temperature as a function of composition.
The halt from the curve then defines the eutectic temperature. Then from a fit of the two liquidus curves and a fit of the eutectic temperature, the euctectic composition was defined from the mutual intersection of the lines
combinations of naphthalene (A) and diphenylamine (B) at temperatures just above their melting points.
Liquid A mixed homogeneously with liquid b Solid B in heterogeneous equilibrium with solution Solid A in heterogeneous equilibrium with solution Solid A mixed with solid B.
Appearance of diphenylamine
occur at lower temperature than it will begin to occur in pure diphenylamine due to F.P. lowering
represents the maximum solubility of diphenylamine in naphthalene at given temperature
Assumptions
the system does not form solid solution, that the components exist in their own separate pure phase in solid state. the system is sufficiently diluted so it behaves ideally
the following equation can be used to relate the temperature, mole fraction of substance, and even the enthalpy of fusion.
Clausius-Clapeyron equation.
1) vapor behaves as an ideal gas; 2) volume of the condensed phase is negligible in contrast to the volume of the vapor; and 3) the enthalphy change accompanying the vaporization is independent of temperature applies
for B = naphthalene
4.306549229104ln+2.830055186103 = 4.654084107104ln(1)+3.06626192103
Xn+1=x(f(x) / f(x))
XB=0.357957449 XA=10.3580 or XA=0.642042551
Te=305.5782036 K
Parameter
Eutectic Temperature, C
32
32. 95 2.96875
Euctectic composition Mole Mole fraction of fraction of naphthalene diphenylami ne 0.35795744 0.64204255 9 1 0.36 0.64 0.570613 -0.31813
Conclusion
The phase diagram of naphthalene and diphenylamine, a mixture of miscible liquids but completely immiscible solids illustrates the equilibrium relationship between phases of the mixture.
The eutectic point is the lowest melting point of the mixture in which three phases can be seen, the solid naphthalene, solid diphenylamine and the liquid mixture. From this, F=0, or there is invariance at the eutectic point.
There are four possible combinations of the mixture, or regions in the diagram. The first consist of both liquid A and B. Next is composed of solid A and liquid mixture, while the third id made of solid B and also liquid mixture. The last region which is below the E.P consist of solid A and B
References
Atkins, P.W. 2006. Physical Chemistry. 8th ed. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 176,189- 193. D. P. Shoemaker, C. W. Garland, and J. W. Nibler, Experiments in Physical Chemistry, 5thEdition, McGraw-Hill, New York, 1994, pp. 195-197, 238246. (6th edition, pp 179-182, 215 222.) G. P. Matthews, Experimental Physical Chemistry, Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1985, pp. 46-48, 52-53.