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EQUATION OF STATE OF A PERFECT GAS . Combining Charles' and Boyle's Laws allows us to get a relationship between the basic variables of state without the restrictions of having to maintain either constant temperature or constant pressure conditions.. EQUATION OF STATE OF A PERFECT GAS . Ch
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1. SO345: Atmospheric Thermodynamics CHAPTER 4: EQUATION OF STATE OF A PERFECT GAS (IDEAL GAS LAW)
2. EQUATION OF STATE OF A PERFECT GAS Combining Charles' and Boyle's Laws allows us to get a relationship between the basic variables of state without the restrictions of having to maintain either constant temperature or constant pressure conditions.
3. EQUATION OF STATE OF A PERFECT GAS Charles' Law + Boyle's Law - - - - - - - ->
a general gas law for ideal gases
4. EQUATION OF STATE OF A PERFECT GAS For the generalized law, we do not need:
isothermal (Boyles Law) or isobaric (Charles and Gay-Lussacs Law) conditions. We can show that any process can be duplicated in terms of a two-step process: isothermal and isobaric (i.e., given any initial states we can arrive at any final state by following a two-step isobaric and isothemal process) - see Appendix A.
5. EQUATION OF STATE OF A PERFECT GAS The resultant general gas law is referred to as "the Equation of State" or Ideal Gas Law:
p? = RT (Eq 4.1)
where p is pressure, T is temperature (Kelvin) and R is a constant called the "specific gas constant".
6. EQUATION OF STATE OF A PERFECT GAS Universal gas constant (R*) this represents the amount of energy needed per mole of gas to change the temperature of the gas by 1 K.
R* = 8314 J/(kg-mole- K)
7. EQUATION OF STATE OF A PERFECT GAS Specific Gas Constant (R) - each gas has its own unique constant value for R, where R = R*/m
For example, the specific gas constant for dry air: Rd = 8314 J/(kg-mole- K)/28.9 kg/kg-mole
= 287 J/(kg-0K)
which is the amount of energy needed to change the temperature of 1 kg of dry air by 1 K.
8. EQUATION OF STATE OF A PERFECT GAS
The Equation of State may also be written as:
p? = R*T (Eq 4.3)
m
9. EQUATION OF STATE OF A PERFECT GAS For dry air, there are two forms of the Equation of State:
p? = RdT (Eq 4.4a)
or p? = R*T (Eq 4.4b)
md
where:
p = total pressure R* = universal gas constant
? = specific volume = 8.314 J/(mol-0K)
Rd= specific gas constant (dry air) T = temperature in 0K
= 287 J/(kg-0K) md = molecular wt of dry air
10. EQUATION OF STATE OF A PERFECT GAS MOLECULAR WEIGHTS OF GAS MIXTURES
Since the Equation of State for a general ideal gas is given as:
p?= (R*/m)T,
computations for individual gases like Nitrogen (N2) and Oxygen (O2) whose molecular weights can be directly taken from a periodic chart are straightforward. How do you determine the molecular weight of a gas mixture (i.e., dry air)?
11. EQUATION OF STATE OF A PERFECT GAS Define a "mean molecular weight" governed by a "weighted harmonic mean": mean molecular weight = where: M = mass (Eq4.5) m = molecular weight (See Appendix B for this mean molecular weight formula).