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:''[[Throttling process]] redirects here. For the regulation of computing resources, see [[throttling process (computing)]].''
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In [[thermodynamics]], the '''Joule–Thomson effect''' or '''Joule–Kelvin effect''' or '''Kelvin–Joule effect''' or '''Joule–Thomson expansion''' describes the [[temperature]] change of a gas or liquid when it is forced through a [[Expansion valve (steam engine)|valve]] or porous plug while kept insulated so that no heat is exchanged with the environment.<ref name=Perry>
{{cite book |author=R. H. Perry and D. W. Green
|title=Perry's Chemical Engineers' Handbook
|publisher=McGraw-Hill
|year=1984
|isbn=0-07-049479-7
}}</ref><ref name=Roy>
{{cite book
|author=B. N. Roy
|title=Fundamentals of Classical and Statistical Thermodynamics
|publisher=John Wiley & Sons
|year=2002
|isbn=0-470-84313-6
}}</ref><ref name=Edmister>
{{cite book
|author=W. C. Edmister, B. I. Lee
|title=Applied Hydrocarbon Thermodynamics
|edition=2nd
|volume=Vol. 1
|publisher=Gulf Publishing
|year=1984
|isbn=0-87201-855-5
}}</ref> This procedure is called a ''throttling process'' or ''Joule–Thomson process''.<ref>
{{cite book
|author=F. Reif
|title=Fundamentals of Statistical and Thermal Physics
|chapter=Chapter 5 – Simple applications of macroscopic thermodynamics
|publisher=McGraw-Hill
|year=1965
|isbn=0-07-051800-9
}}</ref> At room temperature, all gases except [[hydrogen]], [[helium]] and [[neon]] cool upon expansion by the Joule–Thomson process.<ref>
{{cite book
|author=A. W. Adamson
|title=A textbook of Physical Chemistry
|edition=1st
|chapter=Chapter 4 – Chemical thermodynamics. The First Law of Thermodynamics|publisher=Academic press
|year=1973
|lccn=720328
}}</ref><ref>
{{cite book
|author=G. W. Castellan
|title=Physical Chemistry
|edition=2nd
|chapter=Chapter 7 – Energy and the First Law of Thermodynamics; Thermochemistry
|publisher=Addison-Wesley
|year=1971
|isbn=0-201-00912-9
}}</ref>
 
The effect is named after [[James Prescott Joule]] and [[William Thomson, 1st Baron Kelvin]], who discovered it in 1852 following earlier work by Joule on [[Joule expansion]], in which a gas undergoes free expansion in a [[vacuum]].
 
In the '''Joule experiment''', the gas expands in a vacuum and the temperature drop of the system is zero, if the gas is ideal.
 
The throttling process is of the highest technical importance. It is at the heart of thermal machines such as refrigerators, air conditioners, heat pumps, and liquefiers.<ref>M.J. Moran and H.N. Shapiro "Fundamentals of Engineering Thermodynamics" 5th Edition (2006) John Wiley & Sons, Inc.</ref> Furthermore, throttling is a fundamentally [[irreversible process]]. The throttling due to the flow resistance in supply lines, heat exchangers, regenerators, and other components of (thermal) machines is a source of losses that limits the performance.
 
==Description==
The ''[[adiabatic process|adiabatic]]'' (no heat exchanged) expansion of a gas may be carried out in a number of ways.  The change in temperature experienced by the gas during expansion depends not only on the initial and final pressure, but also on the manner in which the expansion is carried out.  
*If the expansion process is [[reversible process (thermodynamics)|reversible]], meaning that the gas is in [[thermodynamic equilibrium]] at all times, it is called an ''[[isentropic]]'' expansion. In this scenario, the gas does positive [[mechanical work|work]] during the expansion, and its temperature decreases.
*In a [[free expansion]], on the other hand, the gas does no work and absorbs no heat, so the internal energy is conserved. Expanded in this manner, the temperature of an [[ideal gas]] would remain constant, but the temperature of a real gas may either increase or decrease, depending on the initial temperature and pressure.
*The method of expansion discussed in this article, in which a gas or liquid at pressure ''P''<sub>1</sub> flows into a region of lower pressure ''P''<sub>2</sub> via a valve or porous plug under steady state conditions and without change in kinetic energy, is called the Joule–Thomson process.  During this process, [[enthalpy]] remains unchanged (see a [[#Proof that the specific enthalpy remains constant|proof]] below).
 
A throttling process proceeds along a constant-enthalpy line in the direction of decreasing pressure, which means that the process occurs from right to left on a T-P diagram. As we proceed along a constant-enthalpy line from high enough pressures the temperature increases, until the inversion temperature. After this, as the fluid continues its expansion, the temperature drops. If we do this for several constant enthalpies and join the inversion points a line called the inversion line is obtained. This line intersects the T-axis at some temperature, named the maximum inversion temperature.
For hydrogen this temperature is -68°C. In [[Vapor-compression refrigeration|Vapour-compression refrigeration]] we need to throttle the gas and cool it at the same time. This poses a problem for substances whose maximum inversion temperature is well below room temperature. Thus hydrogen must be cooled below its inversion temperature if any cooling is achieved by throttling.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Thermodynamics An Engineering Approach| edition=6th|publisher= McGraw Hills|year=2007}}</ref>
 
'''Thermodynamic Interpretation of the experiment''':
 
If we consider that certain amount of gas has passed through the porous plug then the pressure and temperature on the left side of the porous plug are '''P<sub>1</sub>''' and '''T<sub>1</sub>''' and a certain volume of '''V<sub>1</sub>'''.  
 
On the right a similar amount of the gas will be at a pressure of '''P<sub>2</sub>''', the temperature '''T<sub>2</sub>''' and will occupy a volume '''V<sub>2</sub>'''.
 
As the gas is compressed the work done on the gas is '''P<sub>1</sub>V<sub>1</sub>''' and the resultant work done by the gas during this expansion is '''P<sub>2</sub>V<sub>2</sub>'''.
This gives a relation for work done as '''W = P<sub>2</sub>V<sub>2</sub> - P<sub>1</sub>V<sub>1</sub>'''
 
==Physical mechanism==
 
As a gas expands, the average distance between [[molecule]]s grows.  Because of intermolecular attractive [[force]]s (see ''[[Van der Waals force]]''), expansion causes an increase in the [[potential energy]] of the gas. If no external work is extracted in the process and no heat is transferred, the total energy of the gas remains the same because of the [[conservation of energy]].  The increase in potential energy thus implies a decrease in [[kinetic energy]] and therefore in temperature. 
 
A second mechanism has the opposite effect. During gas molecule collisions, kinetic energy is temporarily converted into potential energy. As the average intermolecular distance increases, there is a drop in the number of collisions per time unit, which causes a decrease in average potential energy. Again, total energy is conserved, so this leads to an increase in kinetic energy (temperature).  Below the Joule–Thomson inversion temperature, the former effect (work done internally against intermolecular attractive forces) dominates, and free expansion causes a decrease in temperature.  Above the inversion temperature, gas molecules move faster and so collide more often, and the latter effect (reduced collisions causing a decrease in the average potential energy) dominates: Joule–Thomson expansion causes a temperature increase.
 
==The Joule–Thomson (Kelvin) coefficient==
[[Image:Joule-Thomson curves 2.svg|thumb|400px|Fig.1 Joule-Thomson coefficients for various gases at atmospheric pressure.]]
 
The rate of change of temperature <math>T</math> with respect to pressure <math>P</math> in a Joule–Thomson process (that is, at constant enthalpy <math>H</math>) is the ''Joule–Thomson (Kelvin) coefficient'' <math>\mu_{\mathrm{JT}}</math>. This coefficient can be expressed in terms of the gas's volume <math>V</math>, its [[Specific heat capacity#Heat capacity of compressible bodies|heat capacity at constant pressure]] <math>C_{\mathrm{p}}</math>, and its [[coefficient of thermal expansion]] <math>\alpha</math> as:<ref name=Perry/><ref name=Edmister/><ref>{{Cite web| url=http://www.chem.arizona.edu/~salzmanr/480a/480ants/jadjte/jadjte.html|title= Joule Expansion|author= W.R. Salzman|publisher=Department of Chemistry, [[University of Arizona]]}}</ref>
 
:<math>\mu_{\mathrm{JT}} = \left( {\partial T \over \partial P} \right)_H = \frac{V}{C_{\mathrm{p}}}\left(\alpha T - 1\right)\,</math>
 
See the [[#Derivation of the Joule–Thomson (Kelvin) coefficient|Derivation of the Joule–Thomson (Kelvin) coefficient]] below for the proof of this relation. The value of <math>\mu_{\mathrm{JT}}</math> is typically expressed in °C/[[bar (unit)|bar]] (SI units: [[Kelvin|K]]/[[Pascal (unit)|Pa]]) and depends on the type of gas and on the temperature and pressure of the gas before expansion. Its pressure dependence is usually only a few percent for pressures up to 100 bar.
 
All real gases have an ''inversion point'' at which the value of <math>\mu_{\mathrm{JT}}</math> changes sign. The temperature of this point, the ''Joule–Thomson inversion temperature'', depends on the pressure of the gas before expansion.  
 
In a gas expansion the pressure decreases, so the sign of <math>\partial P</math> is negative by definition. With that in mind, the following table explains when the Joule–Thomson effect cools or warms a real gas:
 
{| class="wikitable"
!If the gas temperature is!!then <math>\mu_{\mathrm{JT}}</math> is!!since <math>\partial P</math> is!!thus <math>\partial T</math> must be!!so the gas
|-
|align=center|below the inversion temperature||align=center|positive||always negative||align=center|negative||align=center|cools
|-
|align=center|above the inversion temperature||align=center|negative||always negative||align=center|positive||align=center|warms
|}
 
[[Helium]] and [[hydrogen]] are two gases whose Joule–Thomson inversion temperatures at a pressure of one [[atmosphere (unit)|atmosphere]] are very low (e.g., about 51 K (−222 °C) for helium).  Thus, helium and hydrogen warm up when expanded at constant enthalpy at typical room temperatures.  On the other hand [[nitrogen]] and [[oxygen]], the two most abundant gases in air, have inversion temperatures of 621 K (348 °C) and 764 K (491 °C) respectively: these gases can be cooled from room temperature by the Joule–Thomson effect.<ref name=Perry/>
 
For an ideal gas, <math>\mu_{\mathrm{JT}}</math> is always equal to zero: ideal gases neither warm nor cool upon being expanded at constant enthalpy.
 
==Applications==
 
In practice, the Joule–Thomson effect is achieved by allowing the gas to expand through a [[Throttle|throttling device]] (usually a [[valve]]) which must be very well insulated to prevent any heat transfer to or from the gas. No external work is extracted from the gas during the expansion (the gas must not be expanded through a [[turbine]], for example).
 
The effect is applied in the [[Carl von Linde|Linde technique]] as a standard process in the [[petrochemical industry]], where the cooling effect is used to liquefy gases, and also in many [[cryogenic]] applications (e.g. for the production of liquid oxygen, nitrogen, and [[argon]]). Only when the Joule–Thomson coefficient for the given gas at the given temperature is greater than zero can the gas be liquefied at that temperature by the Linde cycle. In other words, a gas must be below its inversion temperature to be liquefied by the Linde cycle. For this reason, simple Linde cycle liquefiers cannot normally be used to liquefy helium, hydrogen, or [[neon]].
 
==Proof that the specific enthalpy remains constant==
In thermodynamics so-called "specific" quantities are quantities per kilogram and are denoted by lower-case characters. So ''h'', ''u'', and ''v'' are the enthalpy, internal energy, and volume per kilogram, respectively. In a Joule–Thomson process the specific [[enthalpy]] ''h'' remains constant.<ref>See e.g. M.J. Moran and H.N. Shapiro "Fundamentals of Engineering Thermodynamics" 5th Edition (2006) John Wiley & Sons, Inc. page 147</ref> To prove this, the first step is to compute the net work done when a mass ''m'' of the gas moves through the plug. This amount of gas has a volume of ''V''<sub>1</sub> = ''m'' ''v''<sub>1</sub> in the region at pressure ''P''<sub>1</sub> (region 1) and a volume ''V''<sub>2</sub> = ''m'' ''v''<sub>2</sub> when in the region at pressure ''P''<sub>2</sub> (region 2). Then the work done on the gas by the rest of the gas in region 1 is = ''m'' ''P''<sub>1</sub>''v''<sub>1</sub>. In region 2 the amount of work done by the gas is ''m'' ''P''<sub>2</sub>''v''<sub>2</sub>. So, the total work done by the gas is
 
:<math>mP_2 v_2 - mP_1 v_1.</math>
 
The change in internal energy plus the work done by the gas is, by the first law of thermodynamics, the total amount of heat absorbed by the gas (here it is assumed that there is no change in bulk kinetic energy). In the Joule–Thomson process the gas is insulated, so no heat is absorbed. This means that
 
:<math>mu_2 - mu_1 + mP_2 v_2 - mP_1 v_1 = 0</math>
 
where ''u''<sub>1</sub> and ''u''<sub>2</sub> denote the specific internal energies of the gas in regions 1 and 2, respectively. Using the definition of the specific enthalpy ''h = u + Pv'', the above equation implies that
 
:<math>h_1 = h_2\,</math>
 
where h<sub>1</sub> and ''h''<sub>2</sub> denote the specific enthalpies of the gas in regions 1 and 2, respectively.
 
[[File:Throttling in Ts diagram 01.jpg|450px|thumb|right|Fig.2 Ts diagram of nitrogen. The red dome represents the two-phase region with the low-entropy side the saturated liquid and the high-entropy side the saturated gas. The black curves give the Ts relation along isobars. The pressures are indicated in bar. The blue curves are isenthalps (curves of constant specific enthalpy). The values are indicated in blue in kJ/kg. The specific points a, b, etc., are treated in the main text.]]
 
==Throttling in the Ts diagram==
A very convenient way to get a quantitative understanding of the throttling process is by using diagrams. There are many types of diagrams (hT, hP, etc.). Commonly used are the so-called Ts-diagrams. Fig.2 is the Ts-diagram of nitrogen as an example.<ref>Figure composed with data obtained with RefProp, NIST Standard Reference Database 23</ref> In Fig.2 various points are indicated as follows:
:a ''T'' = 300 K, ''p'' = 200 bar, ''s'' = 5.16 kJ/(kgK), ''h'' = 430 kJ/kg;
:b ''T'' = 270 K, ''p'' = 1 bar, ''s'' = 6.79 kJ/(kgK), ''h'' = 430 kJ/kg;
:c ''T'' = 133 K, ''p'' = 200 bar, ''s'' = 3.75 kJ/(kgK), ''h'' = 150 kJ/kg;
:d ''T'' = 77.2 K, ''p'' = 1 bar, ''s'' = 4.40 kJ/(kgK), ''h'' = 150 kJ/kg;
:e ''T'' = 77.2 K, ''p'' = 1 bar, ''s'' = 2.83 kJ/(kgK), ''h'' = 28 kJ/kg (saturated liquid at 1 bar);
:f ''T'' = 77.2 K, ''p'' = 1 bar, ''s'' = 5.41 kJ/(kgK), ''h'' =230 kJ/kg (saturated gas at 1 bar);
 
As shown before, throttling keeps ''h'' constant. E.g. throttling from 200 bar and 300 K (point a in Fig.2) follows the isenthalp (line of constant specific enthalpy) of 430 kJ/kg. At 1 bar it results in point b which has a temperature of 270 K. So throttling from 200 to 1 bar gives a cooling from room temperature to below the freezing point of water. Throttling from 200 bar and an initial temperature of 133 K (point c in Fig.2) to 1 bar results in point d, which is in the two-phase region of nitrogen at a temperature of 72.2 K. Since the enthalpy is an extensive parameter the enthalpy in d (''h''<sub>d</sub>) is equal to the enthalpy in e (''h''<sub>e</sub>) multiplied with the liquid fraction in d (''x''<sub>d</sub>) plus the enthalpy in f (''h''<sub>f</sub>) multiplied with the gas fraction in d (1-''x''<sub>d</sub>). So
 
:<math> h_d = x_d h_e+(1-x_d)h_f.</math>
 
With numbers: 150 = ''x''<sub>d</sub> 28 + (1 - ''x''<sub>d</sub>) 230 so ''x''<sub>d</sub> is about 0.40. This means that the mass fraction of the liquid in the liquid-gas mixture leaving the throttling valve is 40%.
 
==Derivation of the Joule–Thomson (Kelvin) coefficient==
In this Section a derivation of the formula
 
:<math>\mu_{\mathrm{JT}} \equiv \left( \frac{\partial T}{\partial P} \right)_H = \frac{V}{C_{\mathrm{p}}}\left(\alpha T - 1\right)\,</math>
 
for the Joule–Thomson (Kelvin) coefficient is given.
 
The partial derivative of ''T'' with respect to ''P'' at constant ''H'' can be computed by  expressing the differential of the enthalpy, d''H'', in terms of d''T'' and d''P'', and solving for the ratio of d''T'' and d''P'' with d''H'' = 0. The differential of the [[enthalpy]] is given by:
 
:<math>\mathrm{d}H = T \mathrm{d}S + V \mathrm{d}P.</math>
 
Here, ''S'' is the [[entropy]] of the gas. Expressing d''S'' in terms of d''T'' and d''P'' gives:
 
:<math>\mathrm{d}H = T\left(\frac{\partial S}{\partial T}\right)_{P}\mathrm{d}T  + \left[V+T\left(\frac{\partial S}{\partial P}\right)_{T}\right] \mathrm{d}P.</math>
 
Using
 
:<math>C_{\mathrm{p}}= T\left(\frac{\partial S}{\partial T}\right)_{P},</math>
 
(see ''[[Specific heat capacity#Heat capacity of compressible bodies|Specific heat capacity]]'') we can write:
 
:<math>\mathrm{d}H = C_{\mathrm{p}}\mathrm{d}T  + \left[V+T\left(\frac{\partial S}{\partial P}\right)_{T}\right] \mathrm{d}P.</math>
 
The remaining partial derivative of ''S'' can be expressed in terms of the coefficient of thermal expansion via a [[Maxwell relation]] as follows. The differential of the [[Gibbs energy]] is given by:
 
:<math>\mathrm{d}G = -S \mathrm{d}T + V \mathrm{d}P.</math>
 
The [[symmetry of partial derivatives]] of ''G'' with respect to ''T'' and ''P'' implies that:
 
:<math>\left(\frac{\partial S}{\partial P}\right)_{T}= -\left(\frac{\partial V}{\partial T}\right)_{P}= -V\alpha\,</math>
 
where ''α'' is the cubic [[coefficient of thermal expansion]]. Using this relation d''H'' can be expressed as
 
:<math>\mathrm{d}H = C_{\mathrm{p}}\mathrm{d}T  + V\left(1-T\alpha\right) \mathrm{d}P.</math>
 
Solving for <math>(\part T/\part P)_H</math> by equating d''H'' to zero gives:
 
:<math>\left( \frac{\partial T}{\partial P} \right)_H = \frac{V}{C_{\mathrm{p}}}\left(\alpha T - 1\right).</math>
 
The cooling of a gas by pure isentropic expansion (a [[Reversible process (thermodynamics)|reversible]] [[adiabatic process]] where work, done by gas-expansion, causes it to cool)  is ''not'' Joule-Thomson cooling.
 
=== Joule's second law ===
 
It is easy to verify that for an [[ideal gas]] ''αT'' = 1, so the temperature change of an ideal gas at a Joule–Thomson expansion is zero.
This implies that the internal energy of the ideal gas depends only on its temperature (not pressure or volume), a result known as Joule's second law.
 
== See also ==
 
* [[Critical temperature]]
* [[Ideal gas]]
* [[Enthalpy]] and [[Isenthalpic]]
* [[Refrigeration]]
* [[Reversible process (thermodynamics)]]
 
== References ==
 
{{reflist}}
 
== Bibliography ==
 
*{{cite book
|author=M. W. Zemansky
|title=Heat and Thermodynamics; An Intermediate Textbook
|publisher=McGraw-Hill
|year=1968
|pages=182, 355
|lccn=670891
}}
*{{cite book
|author=D. V. Schroeder
|title=An Introduction to Thermal Physics
|publisher=Addison Wesley Longman
|year=2000
|isbn=0-201-38027-7
|page=142
}}
*{{cite book
|author=C. Kittel, H. Kroemer
|title=Thermal Physics
|publisher=W. H. Freeman
|year=1980
|isbn=0-7167-1088-9
}}
 
== External links ==
{{Commons category|Joule-Thomson effect}}
* {{cite web|url = http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/physics/Joule-ThomsonProcess.html  |title= Joule–Thomson process|work= Eric Weisstein's World of Physics}}
* {{cite web|url = http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/physics/Joule-ThomsonCoefficient.html |title=Joule–Thomson coefficient|work= Eric Weisstein's World of Physics}}
* {{cite web|url = http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?tocId=9044025&query=Joule-Thomson%20effect&ct= |title=Joule–Thomson effect|work= the truncated free online version of the Encyclopædia Britannica}}
* {{cite web|url = http://demonstrations.wolfram.com/InversionCurveOfJouleThomsonUsingThePengRobinsonCubicEquatio/ |title=Inversion Curve of Joule-Thomson Effect using Peng-Robinson CEOS|work=Demonstrations Projects of Wolfram Mathematica}}
<!-- This link no longer works: *  [http://www.nd.edu/~ed/Joule_Thomson/joule_thomson.htm Joule–Thomson effect module] from the University of Notre Dame-->
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:Joule-Thomson effect}}
[[Category:Thermodynamics]]
[[Category:Heating, ventilating, and air conditioning]]
[[Category:Chemical engineering]]
[[Category:Cryogenics]]

Latest revision as of 17:06, 12 January 2015

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Kamagra now also able to offer its benefits not only to youth but also the males who are more than 65 years and not able to stay harder erection. If you weigh 200 pounds you should be drinking 100 ounces of water. This medication may take up to four weeks to become fully effective, if used properly. Taken 1 hour before anticipated sexual activity, Viagra remains active in your body for about 4 hours. The truth is that all of these reduce your stress threshold considerably and improve circulation.

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