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CapMachine/CapMachine.Wpf/PPCalculation/REFPROP/FLUIDS/R12.FLD

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R12 !Short name
75-71-8 !CAS number
Dichlorodifluoromethane !Full name
CCl2F2 !Chemical formula {CCl2F2}
CFC-12 !Synonym
120.913 !Molar mass [g/mol]
116.099 !Triple point temperature [K]
243.398 !Normal boiling point [K]
385.12 !Critical temperature [K]
4136.1 !Critical pressure [kPa]
4.672781 !Critical density [mol/L] (565 kg/m**3)
0.17948 !Acentric factor
0.510 !Dipole moment [Debye]; value from REFPROP v5.0
IIR !Default reference state
10.0 !Version number
1028 !UN Number :UN:
halocb !Family :Family:
???? !Heating value (upper) [kJ/mol] :Heat:
10900. !GWP (IPCC 2007) :GWP:
0.82 !ODP (WMO 2010) :ODP:
18000. !RCL (ppm v/v, ASHRAE Standard 34, 2010) :RCL:
A1 !Safety Group (ASHRAE Standard 34, 2010) :Safety:
1S/CCl2F2/c2-1(3,4)5 !Standard InChI String :InChi:
PXBRQCKWGAHEHS-UHFFFAOYSA-N !Standard InChI Key :InChiKey:
???? !Alternative fluid for mixing rules :AltID:
98829b70 !Hash number from InChI Key :Hash:
!The fluid files contain general information about the fluid in the first 15 to 20 lines, followed by sections for the
! equations of state, transport equations, and auxiliary equations. Equations of state are listed first. The NIST recommended
! equations begin with a hash mark (#). The secondary equations begin with the @ symbol. These symbols can be swapped to
! select a secondary equation as primary and the primary as secondary. The equation of state section also contains auxiliary
! equations for the ideal gas heat capacity or ideal gas Helmholtz energy. Below the equations of state (both primary and
! secondary) are the transport equations, first viscosity and then thermal conductivity. These are then followed by the
! secondary equations if available. The transport section also contains auxiliary equations required to calculate either the
! dilute gas state or the critical enhancement. At the end of the file are additional but not necessary auxiliary equations,
! including simple equations for the vapor pressure, saturated liquid and vapor densities, melting line (for some fluids), and
! sublimation line (for even fewer fluids). This section also contains the equations for dielectric constant and surface
! tension if available. The sections are divided by different symbols (these being _-+=^*~) to aid the eye in locating a
! particular section. Secondary equations are indented 10 spaces to avoid confusion with the NIST recommended equations. The
! end of the fluid file is marked with @END. Anything below that is ignored.
! compiled by M. McLinden, NIST Physical and Chemical Properties Division, Boulder, Colorado
! 02-29-96 MM, Original version.
! 11-01-99 EWL, Add Span 12 term short equation of state.
! 09-04-03 EWL, Modify cp0 coeffs by 8.31451/8.314472 to use same R as EOS but to leave calculated values unchanged.
! 11-13-06 MLH, Add LJ parameters.
! 08-17-10 IDC, Add ancillary equations.
! 10-15-10 MLH, Revise lower temp limits on vis and therm. cond.
! 12-06-12 EWL, Add surface tension coefficients of Mulero et al. (2012).
________________________________________________________________________________
#EOS !---Equation of state---
FEQ !Helmholtz equation of state for R-12 of Marx et al. (1992).
:TRUECRITICALPOINT: 385.12 4.672781 !True EOS critical point [K, mol/L] (where dP/dD=0 and d^2P/dD^2=0 at constant T)
:DOI:
?
?```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
?Marx, V., Pruss, A., and Wagner, W.,
? "Neue Zustandsgleichungen fuer R 12, R 22, R 11 und R 113. Beschreibung
? des thermodynamishchen Zustandsverhaltens bei Temperaturen bis 525 K und
? Druecken bis 200 MPa,"
? Duesseldorf, VDI Verlag, Series 19 (Waermetechnik/Kaeltetechnik), No. 57, 1992.
?
?The uncertainties in density are 0.2% below the critical point temperature and
? increases to 1% in and above the critical region. The uncertainties for vapor
? pressures are 0.2% above 200 K and greater than 1% below 200 K. The
? uncertainties in heat capacities and sound speeds are 1% each.
?
!```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
116.099 !Lower temperature limit [K]
525.0 !Upper temperature limit [K]
200000.0 !Upper pressure limit [kPa]
15.13 !Maximum density [mol/L]
CPP !Pointer to Cp0 model
120.913 !Molar mass [g/mol]
116.099 !Triple point temperature [K]
0.0002425 !Pressure at triple point [kPa]
15.1253 !Density at triple point [mol/L]
243.398 !Normal boiling point temperature [K]
0.17948 !Acentric factor
385.12 4136.1 4.672781 !Tc [K], pc [kPa], rhoc [mol/L]
385.12 4.672781 !Reducing parameters [K, mol/L]
8.314471 !Gas constant [J/mol-K]
22 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 !# terms and # coefs/term for normal terms, Gaussian terms, and Gao terms
2.075343402 0.5 1. 0. !a(i),t(i),d(i),l(i)
-2.962525996 1.0 1. 0.
0.01001589616 2.0 1. 0.
0.01781347612 2.5 2. 0.
0.02556929157 -0.5 4. 0.
0.002352142637 0.0 6. 0.
-0.8495553314e-4 0.0 8. 0.
-0.01535945599 -0.5 1. 1.
-0.2108816776 1.5 1. 1.
-0.01654228806 2.5 5. 1.
-0.0118131613 -0.5 7. 1.
-0.416029583e-4 0.0 12. 1.
0.2784861664e-4 0.5 12. 1.
0.1618686433e-5 -0.5 14. 1.
-0.1064614686 4.0 1. 2.
0.0009369665207 4.0 9. 2.
0.02590095447 2.0 1. 3.
-0.04347025025 4.0 1. 3.
0.1012308449 12.0 3. 3.
-0.1100003438 14.0 3. 3.
-0.003361012009 0.0 5. 3.
0.0003789190008 14.0 9. 4.
#AUX !---Auxiliary function for Cp0
CPP !Ideal gas heat capacity function for R-12 of Marx et al. (1992).
?
?```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
?Marx, V., Pruss, A., and Wagner, W., 1992.
?
?Note: Marx et al. give a Helmholtz form for the ideal gas term; it
? has been converted to a Cp0 form, by the transform:
?
?Cp0/R = (1 + a_3) + SUM{a_i*U_i*exp(U_i)/[1 - exp(U_i)]**2}
? where U_i = omega_i*T_n/T, T_n = Tcrit,
? and the a_i and omega_i are the original coefficients given by Marx.
?
!```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
0. !
10000. !
0. !
0. !
1.0 8.314472 !Reducing parameters for T, Cp0
1 4 0 0 0 0 0 !Nterms: polynomial, exponential, cosh, sinh
4.003638529 0.0 ! 1 + a_3; power in T
3.160638395 1433.4342 ! omega_4 * T_n (T_n = 385.12 K)
0.3712598774 2430.0498 ! omega_5 * T_n
3.562277099 685.65952 ! omega_6 * T_n
2.121533311 412.41579 ! omega_7 * T_n
#AUX !---Auxiliary function for PX0
PX0 !Helmholtz energy ideal-gas function for R-12 of Marx et al. (1992).
?
?```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
?Marx, V., Pruss, A., and Wagner, W., 1992.
?
?Note: Marx et al. give a Helmholtz form for the ideal gas term; it
? has been converted to a Cp0 form, by the transform:
?
?Cp0/R = (1 + a_3) + SUM{a_i*U_i*exp(U_i)/[1 - exp(U_i)]**2}
? where U_i = omega_i*T_n/T, T_n = Tcrit,
? and the a_i and omega_i are the original coefficients given by Marx.
?
!```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
1 2 4 0 0 0 0 0 !Nterms: ai*log(tau**ti); ai*tau**ti; ai*log(1-exp(bi*tau))
3.003638529 1.0 !ai, ti for [ai*log(tau**ti)] terms
-14.7178947415560639 0.0 !aj, ti for [ai*tau**ti] terms
9.4030125798124899 1.0 !aj, ti for [ai*tau**ti] terms
3.160638395 1433.4342 !aj, ti for [ai*log(1-exp(-ti/T)] terms
0.3712598774 2430.0498
3.562277099 685.65952
2.121533311 412.41579
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
@EOS !---Equation of state---
FES !Helmholtz equation of state for R-12 of Span and Wagner (2003).
?
?```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
?Span, R. and Wagner, W.
? "Equations of State for Technical Applications. III. Results for Polar Fluids,"
? Int. J. Thermophys., 24(1):111-162, 2003. doi: 10.1023/A:1022362231796
?
?The uncertainties of the equation of state are approximately 0.2% (to
? 0.5% at high pressures) in density, 1% (in the vapor phase) to 2% in
? heat capacity, 1% (in the vapor phase) to 2% in the speed of sound, and
? 0.2% in vapor pressure, except in the critical region.
?
!```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
173.0 !Lower temperature limit [K]
600.0 !Upper temperature limit [K]
100000.0 !Upper pressure limit [kPa]
13.9 !Maximum density [mol/L]
CPP !Pointer to Cp0 model
120.914 !Molar mass [g/mol]
173.0 !Triple point temperature [K]
1.1633 !Pressure at triple point [kPa]
13.892 !Density at triple point [mol/L]
243.41 !Normal boiling point temperature [K]
0.179 !Acentric factor
385.12 4136.1 4.6727426 !Tc [K], pc [kPa], rhoc [mol/L]
385.12 4.6727426 !Reducing parameters [K, mol/L]
8.31451 !Gas constant [J/mol-K]
12 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 !# terms and # coefs/term for normal terms, Gaussian terms, and Gao terms
1.0557228 0.25 1. 0. !a(i),t(i),d(i),l(i)
-3.3312001 1.25 1. 0.
1.0197244 1.5 1. 0.
0.084155115 0.25 3. 0.
0.00028520742 0.875 7. 0.
0.39625057 2.375 1. 1.
0.63995721 2.0 2. 1.
-0.021423411 2.125 5. 1.
-0.36249173 3.5 1. 2.
0.001934199 6.5 1. 2.
-0.092993833 4.75 4. 2.
-0.024876461 12.5 2. 3.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
#TRN !---ECS Transport---
ECS !Extended Corresponding States model (R134a reference); fitted to data for R-12.
:DOI: 10.1016/S0140-7007(96)00073-4
?
?```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
?Klein, S.A., McLinden, M.O., and Laesecke, A., "An Improved Extended Corresponding States Method for Estimation of Viscosity of Pure Refrigerants and Mixtures," Int. J. Refrig., 20(3):208-217, 1997. doi: 10.1016/S0140-7007(96)00073-4.
?McLinden, M.O., Klein, S.A., and Perkins, R.A., "An Extended Corresponding States Model for the Thermal Conductivity of Refrigerants and Refrigerant Mixtures," Int. J. Refrig., 23(1):43-63, 2000. doi: 10.1016/S0140-7007(99)00024-9
?
?THERMAL CONDUCTIVITY
? The ECS parameters for thermal conductivity were based on the data of:
? Donaldson, A.B., "On the Estimation of Thermal Conductivity of Organic Vapors," Ind. Eng. Chem., 14:325-328, 1975. doi: 10.1021/i160056a008
? Geller, V.Z., Artamonov, S.D., Zaporozhan, G.V., and Peredrii, V.G., "Thermal Conductivity of Freon-12," J. Eng. Phys., 27:842-846, 1974. doi: 10.1007/BF00827625
? Keyes, F.G., "Thermal Conductivity of Gases," Trans. ASME, 76:809-816, 1954.
? Makita, T., Tanaka, Y., Morimoto, Y., Noguchi, M., and Kubota, H., "Thermal Conductivity of Gaseous Fluorocarbon Refrigerants R12, R13, R22, and R23 under Pressure," Int. J. Thermophys., 2:249-268, 1981. doi: 10.1007/BF00504188
? Shankland, I.R., "Transport Properties of CFC Alternatives," paper presented at AIChE Spring National Meeting, Orlando, Florida, 1990.
? Sherratt, G.G. and Griffiths, E., "A Hot Wire Method for the Thermal Conductivity of Gases," Phil. Mag., 27:68-75, 1939. doi: 10.1080/14786443908562205
? Venart, J.E.S. and Mani, N., "The Thermal Conductivity of R12," Trans. Canadian Soc. Mech. Engrs., 3:1-9, 1975.
? Yata, J., Minamiyama, T., and Tanaka, S., "Measurement of Thermal Conductivity of Liquid Fluorocarbons," Int. J. Thermophys., 5:209-218, 1984.
? Average absolute deviations of the fit from the experimental data are:
? Donaldson: 2.18%; Geller: 1.86%; Keyes: 1.36%; Makita: 0.73%;
? Shankland: 1.70%; Sherratt: 1.55%; Venart: 1.29%; Yata: 2.32%.
? Overall: 1.36%.
?
?VISCOSITY
? The ECS parameters for viscosity were based on the data of:
? Assael, M.J., Polimatidou, S.K., Vogel, E., and Wakeham, W.A., "Measurements of the Viscosity of R11, R12, R141b, and R152a in the Temperature Range 270-340 K at Pressures up to 20 MPa," Int. J. Thermophys., 15(4):575-589, 1994.
? Kumagai, A. and Takahashi, S., "Viscosity of Saturated Liquid Fluorocarbon Refrigerants from 273 to 353 K," Int. J. Thermophys., 12(1):105-117, 1991.
? Average absolute deviations of the fit from the experimental data are:
? Assael: 0.64%; Kumagai: 2.45%. Overall: 1.00%.
?
?The Lennard-Jones parameters were estimated from corresponding states with R134a and 298 K as a reference.
?
!```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
116.0 !Lower temperature limit [K]
525.0 !Upper temperature limit [K]
200000.0 !Upper pressure limit [kPa]
15.13 !Maximum density [mol/L]
FEQ R134A.FLD
VS1 !Model for reference fluid viscosity
TC1 !Model for reference fluid thermal conductivity
NUL !Large molecule identifier
1 !Lennard-Jones flag (0 or 1) (0 => use estimates)
0.5186 !Lennard-Jones coefficient sigma [nm] for ECS method
297.24 !Lennard-Jones coefficient epsilon/kappa [K] for ECS method
1 0 0 !Number of terms in f_int term in Eucken correlation, spare1, spare2
0.001344 0. 0. 0. !Coefficient, power of T, spare1, spare2
2 0 0 !Number of terms in psi (visc shape factor): poly,spare1,spare2
1.0524907 0. 0. 0. !Coefficient, power of Tr, power of Dr, spare
-0.0252897 0. 1. 0. !Coefficient, power of Tr, power of Dr, spare
2 0 0 !Number of terms in chi (t.c. shape factor): poly,spare1,spare2
0.99103 0. 0. 0. !Coefficient, power of Tr, power of Dr, spare
0.0029509 0. 1. 0. !Coefficient, power of Tr, power of Dr, spare
NUL !Pointer to critical enhancement auxiliary function
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
#STN !---Surface tension---
ST1 !Surface tension model for R-12 of Mulero et al. (2012).
:DOI: 10.1063/1.4768782
?
?```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
?Mulero, A., Cachadiña, I., and Parra, M.I.,
? "Recommended Correlations for the Surface Tension of Common Fluids,"
? J. Phys. Chem. Ref. Data, 41(4), 043105, 2012. doi: 10.1063/1.4768782
?
!```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
0. !
10000. !
0. !
0. !
2 !Number of terms in surface tension model
385.12 !Critical temperature used in fit (dummy)
-0.000124 0.4318 !Sigma0 and n
0.05662 1.263
#PS !---Vapor pressure---
PS5 !Vapor pressure equation for R-12 of Cullimore (2010).
?
?```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
?Cullimore, I.D., 2010.
?
?Functional Form: P=Pc*EXP[SUM(Ni*Theta^ti)*Tc/T] where Theta=1-T/Tc, Tc and Pc
? are the reducing parameters below, which are followed by rows containing Ni and ti.
?
!```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
0. !
10000. !
0. !
0. !
385.12 4136.1 !Reducing parameters
5 0 0 0 0 0 !Number of terms in equation
-7.0834 1.0
4.3562 1.5
-3.5249 1.67
-2.8872 4.14
-0.89926 10.0
#DL !---Saturated liquid density---
DL1 !Saturated liquid density equation for R-12 of Cullimore (2010).
?
?```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
?Cullimore, I.D., 2010.
?
?Functional Form: D=Dc*[1+SUM(Ni*Theta^ti)] where Theta=1-T/Tc, Tc and Dc are
? the reducing parameters below, which are followed by rows containing Ni and ti.
?
!```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
0. !
10000. !
0. !
0. !
385.12 4.672781 !Reducing parameters
5 0 0 0 0 0 !Number of terms in equation
32.983 0.57
-109.97 0.72
170.67 0.89
-133.42 1.07
42.525 1.25
#DV !---Saturated vapor density---
DV3 !Saturated vapor density equation for R-12 of Cullimore (2010).
?
?```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
?Cullimore, I.D., 2010.
?
?Functional Form: D=Dc*EXP[SUM(Ni*Theta^ti)] where Theta=1-T/Tc, Tc and Dc are
? the reducing parameters below, which are followed by rows containing Ni and ti.
?
!```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
0. !
10000. !
0. !
0. !
385.12 4.672781 !Reducing parameters
6 0 0 0 0 0 !Number of terms in equation
-3.1530 0.418
-6.4734 1.32
-17.346 3.3
-15.918 6.6
-32.492 7.0
-120.72 15.0
@END
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