Heat Capacity Ratio
Heat Capacity Ratio
Heat Capacity Ratio
2017 - 2018
2. How do you characterize an adiabatic process in terms of the heat capacity ratio?
Objectives
• compare the heat capacity ratio obtained experimentally with the heat capacity
ratio of diatomic gas particles.
Introduction
Cp
γ= , (1)
Cv
where Cp and Cv are the heat capacities of a gas at constant pressure and constant vol-
ume, respectively. For an ideal diatomic gas, Cp = 7N k/2 and Cv = 5N k/2, where N is
the number of gas molecules and k = 1.3806488×10−23 m2 ·kg·s−2 ·K−1 is the Boltzmann
constant. The surrounding air is mainly made up of diatomic gases; hence, theoretically,
its heat capacity ratio is γ = 1.4. In this experiment, an experimental value of the heat
cpacity of air will be determined .
Rüchardt’s method
Theory
Using Newton’s second law, the height of the piston from the ground at any time t is
described by
Figure 1: Setup of Rüchardt’s method (left) and a free body diagram of the piston (right).
d2 y(t)
m = P A − Patm A − mg, (2)
dt2
where m is the mass of the piston, P is the gas pressure, A is the cross-sectional area
of the piston, g = 9.81 m/s2 is the acceleration due to gravity, and Patm = 101325 Pa
is the atmospheric pressure. Approximately no heat is transferred into or out of the gas
when it is given quick and small changes in its volume. This is an adiabatic process and
is characterized by
d2 y(t) P0 V0γ
m = A − Patm A − mg, (4)
dt2 Vγ
where V is the volume of the gas at pressure P . For a small vertical displacement δy,
P0 V0γ P0 (Ay0 )γ δy
= ≈ P 0 − γP 0 . (6)
Vγ [A(y0 + δy)]γ y0
In the above expansion, the formula (1 + x)−1 ≈ 1 − x for |x| 1 is used. The equation
of motion of the piston now becomes
d2 (δy(t))
= −ω 2 δy, (7)
dt2
with the angular frequency
s
P0 A
ω= γ . (8)
my0
Equation (7) shows a differential equation for a translated simple harmonic motion. This
equation has the solution of the form
Friction causes damped motion of the piston in contact with the cylindrical glass.
Underdamped oscillation, shown in Figure 2, will be exhibited due to the pressure exerted
by the gas. Newton’s second law is now written as
d2 y dy dy
m 2
= P A − Patm A − mg − b = −ω 2 y − b , (10)
dt dt dt
where b is the damping parameter. The solution for relatively small damping is
!
bt
y(t) = y0 + a exp − cos(ω 0 t), (11)
2m
where
s
0 b2
ω = ω2 − , (12)
4m2
and ω is the angular frequency of undamped oscillation shown in equation (8). In terms
of the period of damped oscillation T = 2π/ω 0 yields
1 γ(Patm A + mg) b2
= − (13)
T2 4π 2 my0 16π 2 m2
where T is determined by the time interval between two successive peaks. Based on
equation (13), the graph of T −2 vs (y0 )−1 is linear, from which follows the heat capacity
ratio derived from the slope of the best-fit equation.
Materials
Procedure
Setup
1. Connect the Gas Pressure Sensor to the Vernier LabQuest. (Caution: Do not use
excessive force when connecting the rubber tubing to the gas pressure sensor. Any
excessive force can cause air leakage.)
2. In the Sensors menu of LabQuest, tap Data Collection then choose the duration to
be 5 s with a sampling rate of 500 samples/s.
3. Connect the gas pressure sensor to the heat engine apparatus using the rubber
tubing.
Measurement
1. Set the initial height of the piston to y0 . Ensure that there is no air leakage by
closing the unused port.
2. Start collecting data in LabQuest then lightly tap the platform to provide a small
initial downward displacement. You should observe a damped oscillation in the
pressure vs time graph.
3. Isolate the oscillating part of the graph by zooming-in the area. Determine the
period of oscillation of the damped oscillation by measuring the time interval for
each peak. You may average the period of several peaks to have a more precise
measurement.
4. Repeat the measurements for all prescribed y0 in Table W2. Record all measure-
ments in this table. Sketch the pressure vs time graph in Figure W1.
5. Do two more trials. Record all measurements in Table W2. Compute the average
period hTexpt i and record in Table W2.
2. Plot hTexpt i−2 against y0−1 in Figure W2. Add a linear fit to this plot.
3. From the equation of the best-fit line, calculate the heat capacity ratio. Complete
Table W4.
Data Sheet
A. Experimental Data
Questions