Lasse Andersen
Chemical
- Nov 7, 2019
- 3
Hey
. I have not been able to find the needed information elsewhere so I will try here.
I wish to calculate the concentration of oxygen in seawater leaving a deaerator operating at a known temperature and pressure (less than 1 atm). If I can calculate the partial pressure of oxygen I can calculate the O2 concentration with Henry's law and correct it to apply for seawater with Sechenov constants. I think I can calculate the partial pressure like this using Dalton and Raoult's law.
(1) Ptot(T) = PO2 + PN2 + Pseawater,vap.(T)
(2) PN2 = 79/21 PO2
Is eq. 2 true for any pressure and temperature as it (almost) is for 1 atm? I can't prove it, but it seems "correct" for some reason..
Other methods of calculating this are welcome. I have also thought of making a full flash calculation, but it seems like too much work for this problem.
I wish to calculate the concentration of oxygen in seawater leaving a deaerator operating at a known temperature and pressure (less than 1 atm). If I can calculate the partial pressure of oxygen I can calculate the O2 concentration with Henry's law and correct it to apply for seawater with Sechenov constants. I think I can calculate the partial pressure like this using Dalton and Raoult's law.
(1) Ptot(T) = PO2 + PN2 + Pseawater,vap.(T)
(2) PN2 = 79/21 PO2
Is eq. 2 true for any pressure and temperature as it (almost) is for 1 atm? I can't prove it, but it seems "correct" for some reason..
Other methods of calculating this are welcome. I have also thought of making a full flash calculation, but it seems like too much work for this problem.