25.12.2012 Views

Aspen Physical Property System - Physical Property Models

Aspen Physical Property System - Physical Property Models

Aspen Physical Property System - Physical Property Models

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

ka,ij<br />

kb,ij<br />

=<br />

=<br />

For best results, binary parameters kij must be determined from phaseequilibrium<br />

data regression, such as VLE data.<br />

Parameter Symbol Default MDS Lower Upper Units<br />

Name/Element<br />

Limit Limit<br />

TCRKA T ci TC x 5.0 2000.0 TEMPERATURE<br />

PCRKA p ci PC x 10 5<br />

OMGRKA � i<br />

RKAPOL � i<br />

RKAKA0 k a,ij 0<br />

RKAKA1 k a,ij 1<br />

RKAKB0 k b,ij 0<br />

RKAKB1 k b,ij 1<br />

References<br />

2 Thermodynamic <strong>Property</strong> <strong>Models</strong> 53<br />

10 8<br />

OMEGA x -0.5 2.0 —<br />

0 x -2.0 2.0 —<br />

0 x -5.0 5.0 —<br />

PRESSURE<br />

0 x -15.0 15.0 TEMPERATURE<br />

0 x -5.0 5.0 —<br />

0 x -15.0 15.0 TEMPERATURE<br />

Mathias, P.M., "A Versatile Phase Equilibrium Equation-of-state", Ind. Eng.<br />

Chem. Process Des. Dev., Vol. 22, (1983), pp. 385 – 391.<br />

Redlich-Kwong-Soave<br />

This is the standard Redlich-Kwong-Soave equation-of-state, and is the basis<br />

for the RK-SOAVE property method. It is recommended for hydrocarbon<br />

processing applications, such as gas-processing, refinery, and petrochemical<br />

processes. Its results are comparable to those of the Peng-Robinson<br />

equation-of-state.<br />

The equation is:<br />

Where:<br />

a0 is the standard quadratic mixing term:<br />

a1 is an additional, asymmetric (polar) term:

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!