petda15
Agricultural
- Nov 23, 2023
- 1
Hey guys I hope things are going well. I am a process engineer at a agricultural processing plant and have been doing some Mass and Energy Balance work around our soybean oil extraction plant and have some questions around some energy balance/enthalpy change calculations:
For example, I am trying to calculate the BTU/lb that is required to take liquid hexane from an initial state of 135 deg F and a pressure -0.3 IWC pressure to the final state of vapor at 142 deg F and a pressure of -20 inHG pressure. I have laid out my process paths as the following:
Hexane (liquid, -.5” H2O @ 135 °F) to Hexane (liquid, 1 atm, 69 °C) to Hexane (gas, 1 atm, 69 °C) to Hexane (gas, -20” Hg @ 99 °F) to Hexane (gas, -20” Hg @ 142 °F)
We know the latent heat of vaporization of Hexane at 1 atm and 69 deg C. And we know the saturation temperature of hexane at -20" HG using boiling point calculation from the antoine equation.
I am having trouble determining the right way to calculate the enthalpy change going from Hexane (gas, 1 atm, 69 °C) to Hexane (gas, 20” Hg @ 99 °F) because it is a changing pressure and temperature process. How would solve across this process path? Is there a way I can directly estimate the enthalpy change from the initial state to final state without the process paths? Thanks.
For example, I am trying to calculate the BTU/lb that is required to take liquid hexane from an initial state of 135 deg F and a pressure -0.3 IWC pressure to the final state of vapor at 142 deg F and a pressure of -20 inHG pressure. I have laid out my process paths as the following:
Hexane (liquid, -.5” H2O @ 135 °F) to Hexane (liquid, 1 atm, 69 °C) to Hexane (gas, 1 atm, 69 °C) to Hexane (gas, -20” Hg @ 99 °F) to Hexane (gas, -20” Hg @ 142 °F)
We know the latent heat of vaporization of Hexane at 1 atm and 69 deg C. And we know the saturation temperature of hexane at -20" HG using boiling point calculation from the antoine equation.
I am having trouble determining the right way to calculate the enthalpy change going from Hexane (gas, 1 atm, 69 °C) to Hexane (gas, 20” Hg @ 99 °F) because it is a changing pressure and temperature process. How would solve across this process path? Is there a way I can directly estimate the enthalpy change from the initial state to final state without the process paths? Thanks.