Physical Chemistry Third Edition

(C. Jardin) #1

424 9 Gas Kinetic Theory: The Molecular Theory of Dilute Gases at Equilibrium


whereVm/n, the molar volume, where we define the constantb,

b

Vexc
n



N

n

2

3

πd^3 NAv

2

3

πd^3 (9.8-5)

and whereNAvis Avogadro’s constant.
If we write Eq. (9.8-4) in the form

P

RT

Vm−b

(9.8-6)

we can see that the pressure of our hard-sphere gas is greater than that of an ideal gas
with the same values ofVmandT. Since our hard-sphere system has only repulsive
forces, this agrees with our earlier assertion that repulsive forces make a positive
contribution to the pressure. Equation (9.8-4) resembles the van der Waals equation
of state of Eq. (9.3-1) except for the absence of the term containing the parameter
a. The parameterarepresents the effect of attractive forces, which make a negative
contribution to the pressure. The argument has been advanced that attractive forces
must slow a particle down just before it strikes a wall because other particles will be
only on the side of the particle away from the wall as it strikes the wall. Similarly,
repulsive forces accelerate a particle as it strikes the wall.

EXAMPLE9.16

Assume that the parameterbin Eq. (9.8-6) can be identified with the van der Waals parameter
b. Calculate the radius of an argon atom from the value of the van der Waals parameterbin
Table A.3.
Solution
From Table A.3,b 3. 219 × 10 −^5 m^3 mol−^1

bNAv

2
3
πd^3

d^3 

3(3. 219 × 10 −^5 m^3 mol−^1 )
2 π(6. 022 × 1023 mol−^1 )

 2. 55 × 10 −^29 m^3

d 2. 94 × 10 −^10 m

From Table A.15,d 3. 61 × 10 −^10 m. This value is calculated from viscosity data taken
at 293 K. The values differ because atoms and molecules are not actually hard spheres, and
different kinds of measurements give different effective hard-sphere sizes.

The virial equation of state of Eq. (1.3-3) is a widely used equation of state for
nonideal gases. Classical statistical mechanics provides formulas for calculating the
virial coefficients of a nonideal monatomic gas. We present the following formula for
the second virial coefficient without derivation:

B 2 −

NAv
2

∫∞

0

e−u(r)/kBT− 14 πr^2 dr (9.8-7)

whereris the intermolecular distance andu(r) is the pair potential energy function.
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