Lecture 15. The Van Der Waals Gas (Ch. 5) : Nobel 1910
Lecture 15. The Van Der Waals Gas (Ch. 5) : Nobel 1910
5)
Nobel 1910
U(r)
Energy
2
1
0
-1
-2
-3
1.5
2.0
2.5
3.0
3.5
4.0
distance
r=
U r
12
long-distance
6 attraction
Peff
-
N 2a
P 2
V
the strong short-range repulsion: the molecules are rigid: P as soon as the
molecules touch each other.
Veff V Nb
N 2a
P 2 V Nb Nk BT
V
Nk BT
N 2a
P
2
V Nb V
(J. m3/mol2)
(x10-5 m3/mol)
3.64
Pc
(MPa)
3.77 2
Tc
(K)
133 K
Air
.1358
.3643
4.27
7.39A
304.2 K
Nitrogen (N2)
.1361
3.85
3.39
126.2 K
Hydrogen (H2)
.0247
2.65
1.30
Water (H2O)
.5507
3.04
Ammonia (NH3)
.4233
3.73
11.28
406 K
Helium (He)
.00341
2.34
0.23
5.2 K
Freon (CCl2F2)
1.078
9.98
4.12
385 K
Substance
N a
a'
N Ab
b'
J33.2
mK6
a
2
22.09
647.3
K
molecule
J m6
a'
2
mol
molecules
NA
mole
N 2a
When can P 2 V Nb Nk BT be reduced to PV Nk BT ?
V
- low densities
Nb V
Na
PV N k BT
k BT
Na
V
- high temperatures
(kinetic energy >> interaction energy)
Problem
The vdW constants for N2: NA2a = 0.136 Pam6 mol-2, NAb = 3.8510-5 m3 mol-1. How
accurate is the assumption that Nitrogen can be considered as an ideal gas at
normal P and T?
N 2a
P 2 V Nb Nk BT
V
Nk BT
aN 2
P
2
V Nb V
Nk BT 2 aN 2
abN 3
V Nb
V
0
V
P
P
P
n
P
8
T
3
PC
TC
n
n
C
1
3
nC
ideal
P / PC
gas @
T/T =
C 1. 2
Nb
n / nC
T / TC
The critical isotherm represents a boundary between those isotherms along which no
such phase transition occurs and those that exhibit phase transitions. The point at which
the isotherm is flat and has zero curvature (P/V= 2P/V2=0) is called a critical point.
Nk BT 2 aN 2
abN 3
V Nb
V
0
V
P
P
P
3
P 2
V
1 8k BT
V
3
3
VC 3 Nb
PC
1 a
27 b 2
k BTC
8 a
27 b
RTC 8
KC
2.67
PCVC 3
- the critical coefficient
substance
H2
He
N2
CO2
H20
RTC/PCVC
3.0
3.1
3.4
3.5
4.5
TC (K)
33.2
5.2
126
304
647
PC (MPa)
1.3
0.23
3.4
7.4
22.1
Problems
1 a
PC
27 b 2
8 a
k BTC
27 b
k BTC
b
8 PC
27 k BTC
27 1.38 10 23 J/K 151 K
a
64 PC
64
4.83 106 Pa
2
5
.
4
10
m
8 PC
8 4.83 10 6 Pa
27 k BTC
a
64 PC
3.8 10 49 J 2 /Pa
Energy of
the vdW Gas
(low n, high T)
U
dU TdS PdV T
T
From
Nk BT
aN 2
the vdW P
2
Nb
V
equation:
U vdW U ideal
U vdW U ideal
S
P
P
T
T
(see Pr. 5.12)
Nk B
1
N 2a
P
V Nb T
V 2
f
N 2a
U
dV N k BT
V
2
V
T
T const
dV
V T
T const
P
V
U vdW U ideal N
N 2a
V2
Na
V
This derivation assumes that the system is homogeneous it does not work for the
two-phase (P, V) region (see below).
The same equation for U can be obtained in the model of colliding rigid spheres.
According to the equipartition theorem, K = (1/2) kBT for each degree of freedom
regardless of V. Upot due to attraction between the molecules (repulsion does not
contribute to Upot in the model of colliding rigid spheres). The attraction forces result
in additional pressure aN2/V2 . The work against these forces at T = const provides
an increase of U in the process of an
1
2 1
isothermal expansion of the vdW gas:
U
N a
vdW T
V
i
V f
U vdW T
1
1
V V
f
i
N 2a
1 1
V f Nb
Nk BT N 2 a
N 2 a
W PdV
2 dV Nk BT ln
V Nb V
Vi Nb
Vi
Vi
Vi V f
V2 Nb
Nk
T
ln
U Q W
1 2
B H
V1 Nb
Vf
Vf
For N2, the vdW coefficients are N2a = 0.138 kJliter/mol2 and Nb = 0.0385 liter/mol. Evaluate the work of
isothermal and reversible compression of N2 (assuming it is a vdW gas) for n=3 mol, T=310 K, V1 =3.4
liter, V2 =0.17 liter. Compare this value to that calculated for an ideal gas. Comment on why it is easier
(or harder, depending on your result) to compress a vdW gas relative to an ideal gas under these
conditions.
Upot
1
1
J
0.17l 3mol 0.0385l / mol
310 K ln
3mol 8.3
Depending on the interplay between the 1st and 2nd terms, its either harder or
easier to compress the vdW gas in comparison with an ideal gas. If both V1 and V2
>> Nb, the interactions between molecules are attractive, and WvdW < Wideal
However, as in this problem, if the final volume is comparable to Nb , the work
against repulsive forces at short distances overweighs that of the attractive forces
at large distances. Under these conditions, it is harder to compress the vdW gas
rather than an ideal gas.
V = const
U
Uideal
Uideal
U
UvdW
N 2a
T = const
CV vdW CV ideal
UvdW
N 2a
U ideal
f
N 2a
U vdW N k BT
2
V
N 2a
CV ideal T
V
Problem: One mole of Nitrogen (N2) has been compressed at T0=273 K to the volume
V0=1liter. The gas goes through the free expansion process (Q = 0, W = 0), in which
the pressure drops down to the atmospheric pressure Patm=1 bar. Assume that the gas
obeys the van der Waals equation of state in the compressed state, and that it behaves
as an ideal gas at the atmospheric pressure. Find the change in the gas temperature.
2
2
N
a
5
N
a
For 1 mole of the vdW Nitrogen (diatomic gas)
U vdW T0 ,V0 U ideal
RT0
V0
2
V0
5
Tf is the temperature
For 1 mole of the ideal Nitrogen (after expansion): U ideal RT f
2
after expansion
5
N 2a 5
RT0
RT f
2
V0
2
2 N 2a
T f T0
5 RV0
The final temperature is lower than the initial temperature: the gas molecules work against
the attraction forces, and this work comes at the expense of their kinetic energy.
dS
dT
V
dV
T
S vdW
CV
P
dT
T
T
S vdW
V Nb 2 m
Nb
Sideal Nk B ln 1
k
T
N k B ln
B
2
V
N
h
FvdW
FvdW Fideal
GvdW
3/ 2
Nb N 2 a
N k BT ln 1
V
V
f
dT
Nk B
Nk B
dV
2
T
V Nb
f
Nk B ln T Nk B lnV Nb const
2
3/ 2
V Nb 2 m
ln
k
T
B
2
N
h
3
N 2a
U TS Nk BT
N k BT
2
V
V Nb 2 m
N k BT ln
k
T
B
2
N
h
dV
3/ 2
5
2
aN 2
Nk BT
V
PvdW
V Nb 2 m
F PV N k BT ln
k
T
B
2
N
h
3/ 2
Nk BT aN 2
V Nb V 2
2aN 2 Nk BTV
Nk BT
V
V Nb
e 1
QH cV TA TD
A-D
QC
QH
e 1
QC cV TB TC
B-C
TB TC
TA TD
V1
S vdW
V2
f
Nk B ln T Nk B lnV Nb const
2
Tf
V f Nb
f
Nk B ln Nk B ln
0
2
Ti
Vi Nb
T T
QC
e 1
1 B C 1
TA TD
QH
V Nb
TA 1
V2 Nb
S vdW
f
2
Tf
V f Nb
f
Nk B ln Nk B ln
2
Ti
Vi Nb
T V Nb const
2/ f
V Nb
TD 1
V2 Nb
TA TD
2/ f
adiabatic process
for the vdW gas
V Nb
1 1
V
Nb
2
2/ f
V Nb
1 1
V
Nb
2
R / cV
Problem
One mole of Nitrogen (N2) has been compressed at T0=273 K to the volume
V0=1liter. The critical parameters for N2 are: VC = 3Nb = 0.12 liter/mol, TC = (8/27)
(a/kBb) = 126K. The gas goes through the free expansion process (Q = 0, W = 0),
in which the pressure drops down to the atmospheric pressure Patm=1 bar. Assume
that the gas obeys the van der Waals equation of state in the compressed state, and
that it behaves as an ideal gas at the atmospheric pressure. Find the change in the
gas entropy.
S vdW
f
R ln T R lnV Nb f ( N , m)
2
Tf
Vf
Tf
Vf
5
5
S R ln
R ln
R ln
R ln
2
T0
2
T0
V0 Nb
V0 VC / 3
T f T0
9 TCVC
266.2 K
20 V0
Vf
RT f
Patm
2.2 10 2 m 3
5
266.2
2.2 10 2
1
S R ln
R ln
5
.
24
10
26 25.5 J/K
3
3
2
273
110 0.04 10
V1
V2
F
V
F1
(liquid)
N gas
V V1 N liquid V2 V
N N gas N liquid
N
V2 V1
N
V2 V1
F
F
V V2
V V
F 1 N liquid 2 N gas F1
F2 1
N
N
V1 V2
V1 V2
F2
(gas)
V 1 < V < V2
V2 < V
Pvap
T < TC
6
4
2
1
V
Fliq
critical
point
Pvap(T1)
triple
point
Vliq
Vgas
T ,N
Fgas
P
T1
.2
gas @
T / TC
ideal
P / PC
n / nC
F
T ,V
n / nC
P / PC
9
3nC
n
1
3nC
k BT ln
ln
1
k BTC
n
n
3
n
/
n
1
4
n
C
C
For T<TC, there are three values of n with the same . The outer two values of n
correspond to two stable phases which are in equilibrium with each other.
The kink on the G(V) curve is a signature of the 1st order transition. When we move
along the gas-liquid coexistence curve towards the critical point, the transition
becomes less and less abrupt, and at the critical point, the abruptness disappears.
T < TC
Pvap
V6
2
V
Fliq
Fgas Fliquid
V2 V6
dV
T ,N
Pvap V2 V6
T ,N
Fgas
V2
4
5
2,6
V6
PdV
V6
Thus,
dV Fgas Fliquid
T ,N
V2
P V dV P V
vdW
vap
V6
V6
1
the lowest branch
represents the stable
phase, the other branches
are unstable
V2
Problem
P
V
Vliq
Vgas
V1
V2
T < TC
Pvap
V
Fliq
Fgas
Single Phase
tas
tab
l
me
V1(T)
condensation:
le
tab
tas
unstable
me
TC
interface:
4 R 2
N1 4
3
R / V1
N 3
Total balance:
VC
P
2F
0,
0
V
V 2
V2(T)
F 4 R 2 F
N1 4
3
R / V1
N 3
RC
heating
H
H
T
P 0
CP
V
T
V
CP
H
C P T
P
P T
CP
P
H TS VP
S
T
T
V
T
This is a pretty general (model-independent) result. By applying this result to the vdW
equation, one can qualitatively describe the shape of the inversion curve (requires solving
cubic equations...).
Well consider the vdW gas at low densities:
N 2a
P 2 V Nb Nk BT
V
V
P
N 2 a V
2
V T
Nk B
P
N 2a
P
V2
V Nb
N 2a
... P
PV
PNb Nk BT
V
T
V
Nk B
N 2a
P 2
V
Na
Nb
k BT
CP
2a
b 0
k BT
Heating:
2a
b 0
k BT
P V Nb RT
PV RT PNb
H U PV CV R T PNb C PT PNb
cooling
2a
b 0
k BTINV
TINV
2a
27
TC
k Bb
4
Substance
TINV
(P=1 bar)
CO2
(2050)
CH4
(1290)
O2
893
N2
621
H2
205
He
51
He
(23)
Problem
The vdW gas undergoes an isothermal expansion from volume V1 to volume V2.
Calculate the change in the Helmholtz free energy.
In the isothermal process, the change of the Helmholtz free energy is
V2
V2 Nb
RT
N 2a
1
2 1
F PdV
2 dV N a
RT ln
V Nb V
V1 V2
V1 Nb
V1
V1
compare with
F U TS
1 1
V
1 V2
U vdW T N 2 a
TSvdW T