Abstract

Densities of an air-like binary mixture (0.2094 oxygen + 0.7906 nitrogen, mole fractions) were measured along six isotherms over the temperature range from 100 K to 298.15 K at pressures up to 8.0 MPa, using a low-temperature single-sinker magnetic suspension densimeter. The measurements were carried out at T = (100, 115, and 130) K in the homogeneous gas and liquid region, and at T = (145, 220, and 298.15) K in the supercritical region (critical temperature TC = 132.35 K); in total, we present results for 52 (T, p) state points. The relative expanded combined uncertainty (k = 2) of the experimental densities was estimated to be between 0.03 % and 0.13 %, except for four values near the critical point. The largest error is caused by the magnetic suspension coupling in combination with the mixture component oxygen, which is strongly paramagnetic; the resulting force transmission error is up to 1.1 %. However, this error can be corrected with a proven correction model to an uncertainty contribution in density of less than 0.044 %. Due to a supercritical liquefaction procedure and the integration of a special VLE-cell, it was possible to measure densities in the homogeneous liquid phase without changing the composition of the liquefied mixture. Moreover, saturated liquid and saturated vapor densities were determined at T = (100, 115, and 130) K by extrapolation of the experimental single-phase densities to the saturation pressure. The new experimental results were compared with the mixture model of Lemmon et al. for the system (nitrogen + argon + oxygen) and the GERG-2008 equation of state.

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