Exercise 1 PDF
Exercise 1 PDF
Exercise 1 PDF
Prepared by:
Habiling, Jhoneliza B.
MSE-4/ 2014108882
MSE113-2L/E01
INTRODUCTION
The three fundamental gas laws discover the relationship of pressure,
temperature, volume and amount of gas. Boyle's Law tells us that the volume of gas
increases as the pressure decreases. Charles' Law tells us that the volume of gas
increases as the temperature increases. And Avogadro's Law tell us that the volume
of gas increases as the amount of gas increases. The ideal gas law is the combination
For Boyle’s Law, the correlation between Pressure (P), Volume (V), assume
𝑃1 𝑉1 = 𝑃2 𝑉2 -------------------------------------------------------------------- (eq.1)
Charle’s Law on the other hand, is the correlation between Temperature and
Volume, assuming pressure and amount of gas remain constant. Volume is directly
And for Avogadro’s Law, it is the correlation between the Amount of gas (n) and
Lastly, combining the three simple gas laws will give us the Ideal Gas Laws. By
setting all three laws directly or inversely proportional to Volume, and replacing the
OBJECTIVES
In this exercise the main objective is to provide a graph for each gas laws.
PROGRAM
T1 = 10
T2 = 20
x = 0
L1 = linspace(0,30,31)
ko = 1
a = 2
plot(T,L1)
xlabel('Distance')
ylabel('Temperature')
title('Temperature Profile')
OUTPUT
ANALYSIS
The exercise is a preparation or a practice for the students to learn the basics
in plotting and getting a graph using equations. All the figures above agrees to the
law of the simple gas laws. The first figure shows that as the temperature increases,
the volume also increases which agree to the Charle’s law. Second figure shows that
as you increase the volume, the pressure decreases, which is a Boyle’s law. Lastly,
the third figure shows that all three laws directly or inversely proportional to
Volume.
FLOWHART
Customoization of
Program then plots
the legend and
the function
title of the graph