Is it possible to convert a Henry's Law Constant from a mole fraction to a molar concentration?
I'm trying to do this for an ammonia/air/water system at 298K and 1 bar. The Henry's Law Constant in mole fraction is 0.95.
Is this even possible with the information I have?
|

Conversion Of Henry's Law Constants
Started by lfro, May 15 2016 05:57 AM
1 reply to this topic
Share this topic:
#1
Posted 15 May 2016 - 05:57 AM
#2
Posted 16 May 2016 - 09:48 AM
Short but useless answer: Yes it is possible to convert Henry's law constants from one measure of concentration to another.
With the information you have? Not with much confidence in the result.
The main thing I see missing from the data given is the density of the liquid phase, or any information that would allow one to estimate the density of the liquid phase. I think that, if you had that piece of information, you would have a good basis for performing the unit conversion.
Similar Topics
Coefficient Of Conversion Of Electrical Energy Into Thermal Energy ForStarted by Guest_amx_* , 03 Apr 2024 |
|
![]() |
||
Conversion Of M3 Of Natural Gas To M3 Of LngStarted by Guest_sachico28_* , 30 Sep 2023 |
|
![]() |
||
![]() Calculation Tools: Unit Conversion, Drum, Compressor, Flare, Control VStarted by Guest_ReonArd_* , 16 Mar 2023 |
|
![]() |
||
Under What Conditions Can A Real Cstr Achieve A Higher Conversion ThanStarted by Guest_HWIK_* , 12 Dec 2022 |
|
![]() |
||
Define Conversion Reaction In Hysys Using VbaStarted by Guest_Ghirahim_* , 05 Jul 2022 |
|
![]() |