You are on page 1of 2

Matthew Leibowitz Work for Question 2

Work to get the mu values for different species at different temperature ranges
O (hi)
O(lo)
O2 (hi)
O2 (lo)
O3 (hi)
O3 (lo)
a1
2.54363697 3.168267 3.66096083 3.7824564 12.330291
3.40738221
a2
-2.7316E-05 -0.003279 0.00065637 -0.002997 -0.011932
0.002053791
a3
-4.1903E-09 6.64E-06 -1.411E-07 9.847E-06 7.987E-06
1.38486E-05
a4
4.9548E-12 -6.13E-09 2.058E-11 -9.68E-09 -1.77E-09 -2.23312E-08
a5
-4.7955E-16 2.11E-12 -1.299E-15 3.244E-12 1.261E-13
9.76073E-12
a6
29226.012 29122.26 -1215.9773 -1063.944 12675.583
15864.4979
a7
4.92229457 2.051933 3.41536184 3.6576757 -40.88234
8.2824758
T (K):
3000
300
3000
300
3000
300
h/RT
12.257772 99.91192 3.9346024 0.0217929 12.700803 56.87764572
h (J/mol)
305733.348 249200.3 98136.853 54.355757 316783.42
141864.224
s/R
25.2216644 19.38731 34.219194 24.695529 44.589956 28.77555225
s (J/mol)
209.692918 161.1861 284.49838 205.31863 370.7209 239.2399414
(J/mol)
305943.041 249361.5 98421.351 259.67439 317154.14 142103.4639
Reference Values
Solving nonlinear equations using wolfram alpha
R (J/molK)
8.314
T= 300 K, P=0.1 atm case

Where x=2 and y=1

Where x=2 and y=1

Reference Values
R (J/molK)

8.314

You might also like