Archive for July 17th, 2008

 

Critical and Pseudocritical Temperature

Jul 17, 2008 in Learn

Diagram of particles in solid, liquid, and gas...Image via Wikipedia Critical Temperature is the temperature above which, no matter how much pressure you apply, you cannot force a gas to become a liquid. Interestingly enough, though, if you apply sufficiently high pressures, you can form a solid. Essentially, distinct liquid and solid phases of a substance no longer exist.

If you measure the vapour pressure of a substance at the critical temperature, that pressure is called the critical pressure. Alternatively it could be defined as the pressure which is required to liquefy a vapour at its critical temperature.

A substance is a vapour when it is in equilibrium with the substance in another phase, and a gas when there is no liquid or solid present. Therefore, by definition, except at the extremely high pressures mentioned above, any substance above its critical temperature, is a gas. A liquid does not have to boil, nor a solid to sublime (change state directly from solid to vapour/gas-Ed.) to form a vapour. You can draw a serious of lines, plotted on a graph where the x-axis shows volume, and the y-axis shows pressure, which correspond to different temperatures and called isotherms, which demonstrate what will happen to a substance as you increase temperature with a given volume (or pressure). The one with most relevance of course is nitrous oxide…(see here).

Pseudo-critical temperature is the critical temperature of a mixture of gases. In anaesthesia it is commonly used to describe the temperature at which a 50:50 mixture of oxygen and nitrous oxide separates (laminates) forming liquid nitrous oxide and gaseous oxygen, which occurs at (depending on the pressure) temperatures in the range -7 to -5.5 degrees Celsius in cylinders, and lower temperatures in a pipeline (due to lower pressures) at around -20 degrees Celsius.

Critical and Pseudocritical Temperature

Jul 17, 2008 in Learn

Diagram of particles in solid, liquid, and gas...Image via Wikipedia Critical Temperature is the temperature above which, no matter how much pressure you apply, you cannot force a gas to become a liquid. Interestingly enough, though, if you apply sufficiently high pressures, you can form a solid. Essentially, distinct liquid and solid phases of a substance no longer exist.

If you measure the vapour pressure of a substance at the critical temperature, that pressure is called the critical pressure. Alternatively it could be defined as the pressure which is required to liquefy a vapour at its critical temperature.

A substance is a vapour when it is in equilibrium with the substance in another phase, and a gas when there is no liquid or solid present. Therefore, by definition, except at the extremely high pressures mentioned above, any substance above its critical temperature, is a gas. A liquid does not have to boil, nor a solid to sublime (change state directly from solid to vapour/gas-Ed.) to form a vapour. You can draw a serious of lines, plotted on a graph where the x-axis shows volume, and the y-axis shows pressure, which correspond to different temperatures and called isotherms, which demonstrate what will happen to a substance as you increase temperature with a given volume (or pressure). The one with most relevance of course is nitrous oxide…(see here).

Pseudo-critical temperature is the critical temperature of a mixture of gases. In anaesthesia it is commonly used to describe the temperature at which a 50:50 mixture of oxygen and nitrous oxide separates (laminates) forming liquid nitrous oxide and gaseous oxygen, which occurs at (depending on the pressure) temperatures in the range -7 to -5.5 degrees Celsius in cylinders, and lower temperatures in a pipeline (due to lower pressures) at around -20 degrees Celsius.