1.5 Thermodynamics of supercritical fluids

Here’s a clear explanation of the thermodynamics of supercritical fluids, tailored for understanding Supercritical Fluid Extraction (SFE):


1. What Are Supercritical Fluids (SCFs)?

supercritical fluid is a substance at temperature and pressure above its critical point (Tc and Pc), where liquid and gas phases are no longer distinguishable.

  • Exhibits gas-like properties: low viscosity, high diffusivity
  • Exhibits liquid-like properties: high density, high solvating power

Supercritical fluids are ideal for SFE because they combine the advantages of gases and liquids.


2. Key Thermodynamic Properties

PropertyBehavior in SCFSignificance in SFE
Density (ρ)Tunable with pressure & temperatureControls solubility of solutes
Viscosity (η)Low (like gas)Enhances diffusion into plant matrices
Diffusivity (D)High (like gas)Faster mass transfer
Solvent PowerRelated to densityHigher density → dissolves heavier compounds
Compressibility (κ)Moderate to high, decreases with pressureImpacts pressure tuning and process control

3. Phase Behavior & Supercritical Region

  • Below Tc: Distinct liquid and gas phases
  • Above Tc and Pc: Supercritical region → density, viscosity, and diffusivity can be tuned
  • Density effect: Small changes in pressure → large change in density → large change in solubility

Example (CO₂):

  • At 100 bar & 35°C → density ≈ 0.7 g/mL
  • At 300 bar & 40°C → density ≈ 0.9 g/mL
  • Higher density → extracts heavier or less polar compounds

4. Solubility & Selectivity

  • Solubility of solutes in SCFs is highly dependent on density:
    • Slight increase in pressure → increased density → higher solubility
  • Temperature also affects solubility:
    • ↑ Temperature → ↑ solute vapor pressure (positive effect)
    • ↑ Temperature → ↓ SCF density (negative effect)
  • This balance allows selective extraction of target compounds by tuning T & P.

5. Isotherms & Phase Diagrams

  • P–ρ–T diagrams help visualize SCF behavior:
    • “Fan-like” region near critical point → small T or P changes drastically alter density and solvating power
  • Operators can tune extraction conditions along this curve to maximize selectivity and yield

6. Fractionation & Density Tuning

  • Stepwise fractionation: Use sequential T & P settings to extract light, medium, and heavy compounds
  • Supercritical CO₂ can also be modified with co-solvents (ethanol, methanol) to increase polarity and dissolve polar compounds

7. Summary

  • Supercritical fluids combine gas diffusivity with liquid solvency, enabling efficient extraction
  • Density is the key tunable parameter for solubility
  • Thermodynamics governs selectivity, yield, and extraction kinetics
  • Understanding SCF thermodynamics is essential for process optimization and scale-up in SFE

If you want, I can make a thermodynamics infographic for SFE, showing:

  • SCF region above critical point
  • How pressure and temperature tuning changes density and solubility
  • Flow from raw material → extraction → fractionation

It’s perfect for training or presentations.

Do you want me to create that infographic?