What is the density of a mixture of methane, ethane, propane, and n-butane at 130^@ "C" and "1 atm"? What is its specific gravity?

1 Answer
May 24, 2017

D = "0.7867 g/L"
"SG" = 0.898


Each gas has a compressibility factor Z:

Z = (PV)/(nRT)

  • When Z > 1, the average distance between gases is farther than if they were ideal gases. i.e. it is more difficult to compress than if it were ideal.
  • When Z < 1, the average distance between gases is closer than if they were ideal gases. i.e. it is easier to compress than if it were ideal.
  • When Z = 1, the gas is ideal.

Regardless of whether it is ideal or not, Z can be used in the above formula (which resembles the ideal gas law), since V/n is the molar volume, which is the only variable in the ideal gas law dependent on the identity of the gas.

Z can be looked up or calculated, and from there, barV = V/n can be calculated to determine the density contribution. At 25^@ "C" and "1 atm", we reference Z to be:

Z_("methane") = 0.99825
Z_("ethane") = 0.99240
Z_("propane") = 0.99381
Z_("butane") = 0.96996

We therefore assume that Z at 25^@ "C" varies little compared to at 130^@ "C" (which does not give much error compared to assuming ideality). So:

barV_("methane") = (Z_"methane"RT)/P = ((0.99825)("0.082057 L"cdot"atm/mol"cdot"K")("403.15 K"))/("1 atm")

= "33.02 L/mol"

barV_("ethane") = (Z_"ethane"RT)/P = ((0.99240)("0.082057 L"cdot"atm/mol"cdot"K")("403.15 K"))/("1 atm")

= "32.83 L/mol"

barV_("propane") = (Z_"propane"RT)/P = ((0.99381)("0.082057 L"cdot"atm/mol"cdot"K")("403.15 K"))/("1 atm")

= "32.88 L/mol"

barV_("butane") = (Z_"butane"RT)/P = ((0.96996)("0.082057 L"cdot"atm/mol"cdot"K")("403.15 K"))/("1 atm")

= "32.09 L/mol"

So, in general, the density of the mixture would then be, not assuming the gas molar volumes are identical (which would have been true for ideal gases):

bb(D_"mixture") = (sum_i m_i)/(sum_i V_i)

= bb((sum_i n_iM_i)/(sum_i n_i barV_i))

where n, m, and M are the mols, mass in "g", and molar mass in "g/mol", respectively.

So, we then get, for "1 mol" of sample gas, and writing methane, ethane, propane, and n-butane in the sum in that order:

color(blue)(D_"mixture") = (0.6cdot16.0426 + 0.2cdot30.069 + 0.1cdot44.0962 + 0.1cdot58.123)/(0.6cdot33.02 + 0.2cdot32.83 + 0.1cdot32.88 + 0.1cdot32.09) "g"/"L"

= color(blue)("0.7867 g/L")

(As a note, if we had assumed the molar volumes were identical, then the density would have turned out to be a simple average weighted by the mol fractions, and would be "0.7899 g/L", which is only a little different.)

As for specific gravity, there is more than one definition, so I will assume you mean the true specific gravity for gases, which is the ratio of the gas density to the density of air at this T and P ("0.876 g/L", 130^@ "C", "1 atm").

Now that we have its density though, the calculation is quite easy:

color(blue)("SG") = (D_"mixture")/(D_"air")

= "0.7867 g/L"/"0.876 g/L"

= color(blue)(0.898)