subject
Engineering, 02.09.2020 02:01 cutie777

In the nitrogen liquefaction process, nitrogen gas is pre-cooled from 365 K and 50 bar to 80 K and 2 bar. This pre-cooled nitrogen is then liquefied (we are not currently modeling the liquefaction step). On this assignment, we are assuming ideal gas behavior. Required:a. Devise two distinct reversible non-flow processes (any number of steps) for accomplishing this change of state. b. Calculate ΔU each process on the basis of 1 mol of N2 gas. c. Calculate ΔH for each process on the basis of 1 mol of N2 gas. d. On a scale of 0 (not confident) to 3 (entirely confident), how confident are you that the assumption of ideal gas behavior is valid? Justify your answer.

ansver
Answers: 2

Another question on Engineering

question
Engineering, 03.07.2019 15:10
If you were designing a bumper for a car, would you prefer it to exhibit elastic or plastic deformation? why? consider the functions of a bumper in both a minor "fender-bender" and a major collision.
Answers: 1
question
Engineering, 04.07.2019 16:10
An electrical motor raises a 50kg load at a construct velencity .calculate the power of the motor, if it takes 40sec to raise the load through a height of 24m(take g =9.8n/g)
Answers: 2
question
Engineering, 04.07.2019 18:10
The drive force for diffusion is 7 fick's first law can be used to solve the non-steady state diffusion. a)-true b)-false
Answers: 1
question
Engineering, 04.07.2019 18:10
You are making beer. the first step is filling the glass carboy with the liquid wort. the internal diameter of the carboy is 15 in., and you wish to fill it up to a depth of 2 ft. if your wort is drawn from the kettle using a siphon process that flows at 3 gpm, how long will it take to fill?
Answers: 1
You know the right answer?
In the nitrogen liquefaction process, nitrogen gas is pre-cooled from 365 K and 50 bar to 80 K and 2...
Questions
question
Mathematics, 16.09.2019 18:30
question
Biology, 16.09.2019 18:30
question
Mathematics, 16.09.2019 18:30
question
History, 16.09.2019 18:30
Questions on the website: 13722367