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Lecture 2 Thermochemistry X.S. Bai Thermochemistry Design a power plant X.S. Bai Thermochemistry When we study a combustion device, what do we want to know? X.S. Bai • • • • heat generated power production combustion efficiency combustion control • • • • Temperature pressure species concentrations flow velocity Thermochemistry When we study a combustion device, what do we want to know? X.S. Bai • • • • heat generated power production combustion efficiency combustion control • • • • Temperature pressure species concentrations flow velocity Thermochemistry Outlines • Multi-component mixture – definition of thermodynamic variables • Law of mass conservation – molecules are not conserved – elements are conserved • First Law of thermodynamics – energy is conserved • Second Law of thermodynamics – chemical reactions follows certain directions X.S. Bai Thermochemistry Mixture in a combustion system X.S. Bai Thermochemistry Mixture of a combustion gas (1) • Mixture of a combustion gases contains – fuel (contain C, H, O …) • fossil fuels (Coal, natural gas, gasoline, kerosene ..) • biomass fuel (wood chips, city waste …) – air (23.3% oxygen, 76.7% nitrogen in mass) – Products • CO2 (green house gas) • H2O • minor species (CO, soot, NOx …) X.S. Bai Thermochemistry Mixture of combustion gas A macro-scopic view X.S. Bai Thermochemistry Mixture of combustion gas (2) A micro-scopic view Molecules in a gas mixture moves randomly at a speed of sound, the distance between molecules is in the order of mean free path Time 1 X.S. Bai Time 2 Time 3 Thermochemistry Molecule Units • A molecule consists of atom. An atom consists of nucleus and electrons. A nucleus consists of protons and neutrons ... – 1 proton weighs 1.6726 x 10-27 kg – 1 neutron weighs about the same as 1 proton – 1 electron weighs 0.9109 x 10-30 kg Too light ? – 1 mole molecules = 6.0221 x 1023 molecules – 1 mole C weighs = 12 g – molecular weight [kg/kmole] X.S. Bai Thermochemistry Mixture (3) • In a combustion system, usually there are a lot of species (different molecules), say N. It is often useful to know mass percentage and mole percentage … – mass fraction Yi= mass of species i total mass – mole fraction Xi= number of moles of i total number of moles – number of mole i = mass of species i molecule weight of i Ex: X.S. Bai Species i = all molecules of type i 1 kg CO = 1000/28=36 mole CO Thermochemistry Mixture (4) • Mole concentration, mole fraction and mass fraction can be converted if the molecule weight of species is known. X i MWi Yi = , MWmix Yi MM mix Xi = , MWi X.S. Bai i )1 #N Y & = " X i MWi = %% " MWi (( i $ ' i=1 i=1 N MWmix Yi Ci = ! MW Thermochemistry Mixture (5) • The concept of stoichiometry – stoichiometric air-fuel ratio (A/F)stoic=(mair/mfuel)stoic For a stoichiometric methane/air and propane/air system calculate the above quantities – stoichiometric fuel-air ratio (F/A)stoic=1/(A/F)stoic – equivalence ratio φ=(A/F)stoic / (A/F)=(F/A)/(F/A)stoic – percent stoichiometric air =100%/φ methane 17.16 1 Propane 15.60 1 A/F φ – percent excess air = 100%*(1φ)/φ X.S. Bai Thermochemistry Mixture (6) - ideal gas • The concept of ideal gas – An ideal gas is referred to a gas that has no inter-molecular forces and no volume – introduced in relating pressure and density (equation of state) N p / ! = nR u T, Yi 1 n =" = MWmix i=1 MWi Xi pi = X i p = !R u T MWmix X.S. Bai Thermochemistry Mixture of combustion gas (7) - macroscopic view • 1 m3 air at standard condition contains about 30 mole molecules, that is 1.8*1025 molecules. • Tennekes & Lumley (A first course in turbulence) – The smallest flow scale is Kolmogrov scale η ≈ 10 −4 m – the distance between molecules is the mean free path ξ ≈ 10 −8 m – the ratio between these scale is ξ / η ≈ 10 −4 ∝ Ma / Re1/ 4 • So, it can be assumed that in combustion system, the gases can be treated as continuum media. X.S. Bai Thermochemistry Mass conservation in a combustion system X.S. Bai Thermochemistry Law of mass conservation In the universe, matters can be transformed to different forms, but the total mass of the matter involved in the transformation is not changed X.S. Bai Thermochemistry Mass conservation in a combustion system • Matter is comprised of molecules; molecule is comprised of atoms; atom is comprised of nuclei and electrons, nucleus is comprised of protons and neutrons… H H H2 o : o X.S. Bai Thermochemistry Mass conservation in a combustion system • Processes involving formation and destruction of new molecules are referred to as chemical reactions • Combustion involves only chemical reactions – molecules are not conserved in combustion – atoms (elements) are conserved in combustion !!! X.S. Bai Thermochemistry Mass conservation in a combustion system • A chemical reaction can be denoted as … – ex. CO+0.5O2 CO2 – this equation indicates 1 mole of CO react with 1/2 mole of oxygen and form 1 mole of carbon dioxide – recall 1 mole of matter = 6.02*1023 molecules • In the above example none of the three molecules are conserved, but the two atoms involved (C & O) are conserved. The factor 0.5 is due to C & O conservation during chemical reactions • In general N ν i' M i → ∑ i =1 X.S. Bai N ν i''M i ∑ i =1 Thermochemistry Mass conservation in a combustion system • How to use Law of mass conservation to compute Yi – use mass conservation of N atoms to construct N algebraic equations – For a C, H, O, N system, 4 algebraic relations are obtained YJ = mJ ∑m = J ∑ i MWJ Yi nJi MWi Number of atom J in molecule i X.S. Bai Thermochemistry Mass conservation – example: biomass combustion • 10 kg of dry wood chips are supplied to a combustor – C (52% mass) – H (6% mass) – O (41% mass) • Air • Products – CO2, H2O • Find out: – Stoichiometric Air – CO2, H2O X.S. Bai Thermochemistry Mass conservation – example biomass combustion Air required: x kg Total reactants: 10+x kg Total products: 10+x kg The final products are: CO2, H2O, N2 Conservation of C, H, N, O: 4 equations 4 unknowns: x, YCO2, YH2O, YN2 X.S. Bai Thermochemistry Mass conservation – example biomass combustion • Air required: 62.52 kg • Products – YCO2=0.26291 – YH2O=0.07446 – YN2=0.66123 X.S. Bai Thermochemistry Energy conservation in a combustion system X.S. Bai Thermochemistry Energy conservation in a combustion system … • First Law of thermodynamics says for a fixed mass system – Energy can be converted from one form to another – change of total energy = heat added to the system work done by the system to the surroundings X.S. Bai Thermochemistry Energy conservation in a combustion system … • Internal energy – a sum of all the microscopic form of energy, which are related to molecular structure and degree of the molecular activity. – Thermal energy and chemical energy has to be taken into account • Kinetic energy – Macroscopic form of energy related to the fluid motion • Potential energy – Macroscopic form of energy related to the fluid height X.S. Bai Thermochemistry Energy conservation in a combustion system … • Kinetic energy • Potential energy • Energy transfer – heat transfer – work X.S. Bai Thermochemistry Energy conservation in a combustion system … Internal energy a sum of all the microscopic form of energy, which are related to molecular structure and degree of the molecular activity. • Some physical insight to internal energy – thermal energy • sensible energy • latent energy – chemical energy – nuclear energy X.S. Bai Thermochemistry Energy conservation in a combustion system … • Some physical insight to sensible energy • thermal energy – sensible energy – latent energy X.S. Bai Thermochemistry Chemical bonds Oxygen molecule Water molecule Nitrogen molecule X.S. Bai Thermochemistry X.S. Bai Thermochemistry Electron configuration of Neon X.S. Bai Thermochemistry Chemical bonds X.S. Bai Thermochemistry Energy in combustion systems • Total energy of system per unit mass =e + 1/2v2 + gz – e=specific internal energy – 1/2v2 =specific kinetic energy, v=velocity – gz=specific potential energy X.S. Bai Thermochemistry Energy in combustion systems • Energy conservation – Change of total energy = heat to the system – work done by the system to the surroundings 1 2 !(e + v + gz) = !Q " pdv 2 – for an adiabatic constant pressure system energy conservation says … 1 2 e + p / ! + v + gz = const. 2 • Specific enthalpy: h=e+p/ρ X.S. Bai Thermochemistry Energy conservation in a combustion system … • The concept of enthalpy – has no direct physical meaning, just a combined property – very useful in combustion system • Zero enthalpy – Enthalpy of the element in their naturally occurring state and at standard condition is zero X.S. Bai Thermochemistry Energy conservation in a combustion system … • In combustion problems we assume gas mixtures are ideal N N h = ! h i Yi , e= i=1 h i = h 0i,f+ N !e Y , i i i=1 p= !p , i pi = X i p i=1 T !c pi dT Tref • The concept of enthalpy of formation: hi,f0 – to take into account the chemical energy, define a reference state (p=1atm, T=25C) and let enthalpy of formation for the element in their naturally occurring state zero. – NASA has a dada base for most elements and compounds X.S. Bai Thermochemistry Energy conservation in a combustion system … • The concept of zero enthalpy – enthalpy is a relative quantity in isothermal flows – in combustion, one must take into account the chemical energy in enthalpy !! And nuclear energy is not taken into account !! Zero enthalpy: element at its naturally existing state at standard condition has zero enthalpy X.S. Bai Thermochemistry Energy conservation in a combustion system … • The concept of enthalpy of combustion (heat of combustion) X.S. Bai Thermochemistry Energy conservation in a combustion system … • Using the concept of enthalpy to calculate adiabatic flame temperature (constant pressure system) X.S. Bai Thermochemistry The second Law of thermodynamics • The second law of thermodynamics: – consider a fixed-volume, adiabatic reaction vessel (a close system), the system develops towards a state at which entropy reaches its maximum (or equivalently Gibbs free energy reaches its minimum). – This state is a chemical equilibrium state – It is an ideal state – It is a important reference state X.S. Bai Thermochemistry Chemical equilibrium • Second Law of Thermodynamics – CO+0.5O2 – CO2 CO2 ds>0 ds<0 CO+O2 ? – CO + H2O =CO2+H2 X.S. Bai Thermochemistry Calculation of equilibrium quantities • Element mass conservation • First Law of Thermodynamics – or equivalently given temperature • Second Law of Thermodynamics – specify a chemical equilibrium reaction – Maximal entropy or – minimal Gibbs free energy • NASA code CEC86 available upon request X.S. Bai Thermochemistry Summary • Combustion is a process in which fuel oxidizes • chemical energy is released in the form of sensible (thermal) energy, by breaking old bonds and forming new bonds • First Law of thermodynamics deals with how the energy is converted • Second Law of thermodynamics tells us the maximal extend of this conversion • To know exactly how much energy is converted one needs to learn the next chapter - chemical kinetics X.S. Bai Thermochemistry