Thermodynamic simple conceptual question

In summary: J: In summary, pressure of a gas in an isobaric expansion process is kept constant and may or may not be equal to the external pressure. Free expansion has no work done and the gas may stop expanding due to the container it is in.
  • #1
AnthonyCChem
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In an isobaric expansion process, the pressure of the gas is kept constant. Because of the increase in volume the constant pressure can only be archived by increasing temperature. Then I want to ask is the pressure of the gas necessarily equal to the external pressure throughout the whole process?
It is because many times when we see a P-V diagram is plotted as a horizontal line then we say the process is isobaric. Is it right at the first place? The Pressure on the y-axis should be the pressure of the gas rather than the external pressure. However when calculating work for such a horizontal line we use w=-Pex delta V and substitute the P of the y-axis to the equation while the y-axis should represent pressure of the gas.
It is what I understand. If the P-V diagram is a horizontal line it just tell us the pressure of the gas is unchanged while expanding. Calculating work require us to know the pressure which stop the gas from expanding but instead we use the pressure of the gas to do the calculation. Does that mean the pressure of the gas is equal to that of the external pressure? If not I think there is a lack of information to calculate work for such process as we don't know the external pressure the gas go against.
The next is something I want to ask when calculating work.
1.jpg


Also I would like to ask about free expansion. In free expansion the work done by the perfect gas against the vacuum is zero. The final temperature of the gas remain unchanged so delta U is zero and q is zero too. That means the gas does not lose any energy through heat and work. Then why the expansion would stop? Would the gas expand to a point which the pressure of the gas equal zero to stop because it is expanding against vacuum? If the pressure of the gas is not zero then the gas has not established equilibrium as one side there is pressure while on the other there is no pressure.
Desperate for answer.
 
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  • #2
AnthonyCChem said:
In an isobaric expansion process, the pressure of the gas is kept constant. Because of the increase in volume the constant pressure can only be archived by increasing temperature. Then I want to ask is the pressure of the gas necessarily equal to the external pressure throughout the whole process?
If the process is quasi-static, the answer would be yes. If it is not quasi-static, the external pressure may or may not be equal to the gas pressure. It depends on the way the gas and surroundings are configured.

As soon as the gas becomes dynamic, the pressure is no longer given by PV=nRT. Also, the speed distribution of the gas molecules deviates from a Maxwell-Boltmann distribution, so temperature is not really defined.

Also I would like to ask about free expansion. In free expansion the work done by the perfect gas against the vacuum is zero. The final temperature of the gas remain unchanged so delta U is zero and q is zero too. That means the gas does not lose any energy through heat and work. Then why the expansion would stop? Would the gas expand to a point which the pressure of the gas equal zero to stop because it is expanding against vacuum? If the pressure of the gas is not zero then the gas has not established equilibrium as one side there is pressure while on the other there is no pressure.
Desperate for answer.
Suppose you have a box with a divider in the middle and a gas in one side. If you lift the divider the gas fills the whole box, doubling in volume. The box limits the expansion. In the process the gas does no work on the surroundings. It actually does work on itself but that work ultimately ends up as heat (waves of gas molecules bounce back and forth inside the container and eventually molecular motion becomes completely random).

AM
 

Related to Thermodynamic simple conceptual question

1. What is thermodynamics?

Thermodynamics is a branch of physics that deals with the study of the movement of heat and its conversion into different forms of energy.

2. What are the laws of thermodynamics?

The first law of thermodynamics states that energy cannot be created or destroyed, only transferred or converted. The second law states that the total entropy of a closed system always increases over time. The third law states that the entropy of a perfect crystal at absolute zero temperature is zero.

3. What is the difference between heat and temperature?

Heat refers to the transfer of energy between two objects due to a temperature difference. Temperature, on the other hand, is a measure of the average kinetic energy of the particles in an object.

4. How do thermodynamic systems reach equilibrium?

Thermodynamic systems reach equilibrium when there is no longer a net transfer of energy between the system and its surroundings. This can occur through the exchange of heat, work, or matter.

5. What is the significance of entropy in thermodynamics?

Entropy is a measure of the disorder or randomness in a system. In thermodynamics, it is important because it helps determine the direction and efficiency of energy transfer and conversion processes. The second law of thermodynamics states that the total entropy of a closed system always increases, meaning that all energy transfers tend to increase the overall disorder of the system.

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