frogcurry
Chemical
- Feb 17, 2005
- 23
If I have a vessel with a mixture of hydrocarbon (2 phase) and water (liquid), then raise pressure and temperature till they are higher than the critical points of the hydrocarbons alone, what happens? Does the water affect the critical point (assuming that effectively all the water is in its own phase) of the hydrocarbons? Will all the contents become part of a single critical phase fluid or is it practical to have a critical phase and a liquid phase in the same vessel?
Also what happens in the same situation in a case where the fluid is flowing in a line and is turbulently mixed (i.e. effectively the two liquid phases are combined, and at critical point conditions or higher for the hydrocarbons)?
Grateful thanks to anyone who is able to answer these questions, as I can't grasp the system behaviour in my mind.
Also what happens in the same situation in a case where the fluid is flowing in a line and is turbulently mixed (i.e. effectively the two liquid phases are combined, and at critical point conditions or higher for the hydrocarbons)?
Grateful thanks to anyone who is able to answer these questions, as I can't grasp the system behaviour in my mind.