402 9 Gas Kinetic Theory: The Molecular Theory of Dilute Gases at Equilibrium
This integral is in the form of theerror function, defined in Appendix C by^1
erf (x)
2
√
π
∫x
0
e−t
2
dt (9.3-38)
Our probability is therefore
(probability)
1
2
erf (1.0055) 0. 4225 42 .25%
Where the numerical value was obtained from the table of the error function in Appendix C.
We can obtain an approximate probability of a small finite range∆vxby replacing
the infinitesimal intervaldvxin Eq. (9.3-5) by∆vx:
(
probability that
vxlies in∆vx
)
≈f(v′x)∆vx (for small∆vx) (9.3-39)
wherev′xis a value ofvxwithin the range∆vx.
EXAMPLE 9.6
Find the probability thatvxfor an argon atom in a system at 273.15 K is in the range
650.00 m s−^1 <vx<651.00 m s−^1.
Solution
From Eq. (9.3-39)
probability≈
(
m
2 πkBT
) 1 / 2
e−mv
x^2 /^2 kBT
∆vx
(
M
2 πRT
) 1 / 2
e−Mv
x^2 /^2 RT
∆vx
≈
(
0 .039948 kg mol−^1
2 π(8.3145 J K−^1 mol−^1 )(273.15 K)
) 1 / 2
×exp
(
−(0.039948 kg mol−^1 )(650 m s−^1 )^2
2(8.3145 J K−^1 mol−^1 )(273.15 K)
)
(1.00 m s−^1 )
≈ 4. 05 × 10 −^5
Exercise 9.9
Find the probability thatvxfor an argon atom in a system at 273.15 K is in the range 650 m s−^1
<vx<652ms−^1.
Exercise 9.10
a.What fraction of the molecules has x-components of the velocity between −σvx
andσvx?
(^1) M. Abramowitz and I. A. Stegun, eds.,Handbook of Mathematical Functions with Formulas, Graphs,
and Mathematical Tables, U.S. Govt. Printing Office, Washington, DC, 1964, p. 297ff.