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Wikipedia

Gas

Gas is one of the four fundamental states of matter. The others are solid, liquid, and plasma.[1]

Drifting smoke particles indicate the movement of the surrounding gas.

A pure gas may be made up of individual atoms (e.g. a noble gas like neon), elemental molecules made from one type of atom (e.g. oxygen), or compound molecules made from a variety of atoms (e.g. carbon dioxide). A gas mixture, such as air, contains a variety of pure gases. What distinguishes gases from liquids and solids is the vast separation of the individual gas particles. This separation usually makes a colorless gas invisible to the human observer.

The gaseous state of matter occurs between the liquid and plasma states,[2] the latter of which provides the upper-temperature boundary for gases. Bounding the lower end of the temperature scale lie degenerative quantum gases[3] which are gaining increasing attention.[4] High-density atomic gases super-cooled to very low temperatures are classified by their statistical behavior as either Bose gases or Fermi gases. For a comprehensive listing of these exotic states of matter, see list of states of matter.

Elemental gases edit

The only chemical elements that are stable diatomic homonuclear molecular gases at STP are hydrogen (H2), nitrogen (N2), oxygen (O2), and two halogens: fluorine (F2) and chlorine (Cl2). When grouped with the monatomic noble gaseshelium (He), neon (Ne), argon (Ar), krypton (Kr), xenon (Xe), and radon (Rn) – these gases are referred to as "elemental gases".

Etymology edit

The word gas was first used by the early 17th-century Flemish chemist Jan Baptist van Helmont.[5] He identified carbon dioxide, the first known gas other than air.[6] Van Helmont's word appears to have been simply a phonetic transcription of the Ancient Greek word χάος 'chaos' – the g in Dutch being pronounced like ch in "loch" (voiceless velar fricative, /x/) – in which case Van Helmont simply was following the established alchemical usage first attested in the works of Paracelsus. According to Paracelsus's terminology, chaos meant something like 'ultra-rarefied water'.[7]

An alternative story is that Van Helmont's term was derived from "gahst (or geist), which signifies a ghost or spirit".[8] That story is given no credence by the editors of the Oxford English Dictionary.[9] In contrast, the French-American historian Jacques Barzun speculated that Van Helmont had borrowed the word from the German Gäscht, meaning the froth resulting from fermentation.[10]

Physical characteristics edit

Because most gases are difficult to observe directly, they are described through the use of four physical properties or macroscopic characteristics: pressure, volume, number of particles (chemists group them by moles) and temperature. These four characteristics were repeatedly observed by scientists such as Robert Boyle, Jacques Charles, John Dalton, Joseph Gay-Lussac and Amedeo Avogadro for a variety of gases in various settings. Their detailed studies ultimately led to a mathematical relationship among these properties expressed by the ideal gas law (see simplified models section below).

Gas particles are widely separated from one another, and consequently, have weaker intermolecular bonds than liquids or solids. These intermolecular forces result from electrostatic interactions between gas particles. Like-charged areas of different gas particles repel, while oppositely charged regions of different gas particles attract one another; gases that contain permanently charged ions are known as plasmas. Gaseous compounds with polar covalent bonds contain permanent charge imbalances and so experience relatively strong intermolecular forces, although the compound's net charge remains neutral. Transient, randomly induced charges exist across non-polar covalent bonds of molecules and electrostatic interactions caused by them are referred to as Van der Waals forces. The interaction of these intermolecular forces varies within a substance which determines many of the physical properties unique to each gas.[11][12] A comparison of boiling points for compounds formed by ionic and covalent bonds leads us to this conclusion.[13]

Compared to the other states of matter, gases have low density and viscosity. Pressure and temperature influence the particles within a certain volume. This variation in particle separation and speed is referred to as compressibility. This particle separation and size influences optical properties of gases as can be found in the following list of refractive indices. Finally, gas particles spread apart or diffuse in order to homogeneously distribute themselves throughout any container.

Macroscopic view of gases edit

 
Shuttle imagery of re-entry phase

When observing a gas, it is typical to specify a frame of reference or length scale. A larger length scale corresponds to a macroscopic or global point of view of the gas. This region (referred to as a volume) must be sufficient in size to contain a large sampling of gas particles. The resulting statistical analysis of this sample size produces the "average" behavior (i.e. velocity, temperature or pressure) of all the gas particles within the region. In contrast, a smaller length scale corresponds to a microscopic or particle point of view.

Macroscopically, the gas characteristics measured are either in terms of the gas particles themselves (velocity, pressure, or temperature) or their surroundings (volume). For example, Robert Boyle studied pneumatic chemistry for a small portion of his career. One of his experiments related the macroscopic properties of pressure and volume of a gas. His experiment used a J-tube manometer which looks like a test tube in the shape of the letter J. Boyle trapped an inert gas in the closed end of the test tube with a column of mercury, thereby making the number of particles and the temperature constant. He observed that when the pressure was increased in the gas, by adding more mercury to the column, the trapped gas' volume decreased (this is known as an inverse relationship). Furthermore, when Boyle multiplied the pressure and volume of each observation, the product was constant. This relationship held for every gas that Boyle observed leading to the law, (PV=k), named to honor his work in this field.

There are many mathematical tools available for analyzing gas properties. As gases are subjected to extreme conditions, these tools become more complex, from the Euler equations for inviscid flow to the Navier–Stokes equations[14] that fully account for viscous effects. These equations are adapted to the conditions of the gas system in question. Boyle's lab equipment allowed the use of algebra to obtain his analytical results. His results were possible because he was studying gases in relatively low pressure situations where they behaved in an "ideal" manner. These ideal relationships apply to safety calculations for a variety of flight conditions on the materials in use. The high technology equipment in use today was designed to help us safely explore the more exotic operating environments where the gases no longer behave in an "ideal" manner. This advanced math, including statistics and multivariable calculus, makes possible the solution to such complex dynamic situations as space vehicle reentry. An example is the analysis of the space shuttle reentry pictured to ensure the material properties under this loading condition are appropriate. In this flight regime, the gas is no longer behaving ideally.

Pressure edit

The symbol used to represent pressure in equations is "p" or "P" with SI units of pascals.

When describing a container of gas, the term pressure (or absolute pressure) refers to the average force per unit area that the gas exerts on the surface of the container. Within this volume, it is sometimes easier to visualize the gas particles moving in straight lines until they collide with the container (see diagram at top of the article). The force imparted by a gas particle into the container during this collision is the change in momentum of the particle.[15] During a collision only the normal component of velocity changes. A particle traveling parallel to the wall does not change its momentum. Therefore, the average force on a surface must be the average change in linear momentum from all of these gas particle collisions.

Pressure is the sum of all the normal components of force exerted by the particles impacting the walls of the container divided by the surface area of the wall.

Temperature edit

Air balloon shrinks after submersion in liquid nitrogen

The symbol used to represent temperature in equations is T with SI units of kelvins.

The speed of a gas particle is proportional to its absolute temperature. The volume of the balloon in the video shrinks when the trapped gas particles slow down with the addition of extremely cold nitrogen. The temperature of any physical system is related to the motions of the particles (molecules and atoms) which make up the [gas] system.[16] In statistical mechanics, temperature is the measure of the average kinetic energy stored in a molecule (also known as the thermal energy). The methods of storing this energy are dictated by the degrees of freedom of the molecule itself (energy modes). Thermal (kinetic) energy added to a gas or liquid (an endothermic process) produces translational, rotational, and vibrational motion. In contrast, a solid can only increase its internal energy by exciting additional vibrational modes, as the crystal lattice structure prevents both translational and rotational motion. These heated gas molecules have a greater speed range (wider distribution of speeds) with a higher average or mean speed. The variance of this distribution is due to the speeds of individual particles constantly varying, due to repeated collisions with other particles. The speed range can be described by the Maxwell–Boltzmann distribution. Use of this distribution implies ideal gases near thermodynamic equilibrium for the system of particles being considered.

Specific volume edit

The symbol used to represent specific volume in equations is "v" with SI units of cubic meters per kilogram.

The symbol used to represent volume in equations is "V" with SI units of cubic meters.

When performing a thermodynamic analysis, it is typical to speak of intensive and extensive properties. Properties which depend on the amount of gas (either by mass or volume) are called extensive properties, while properties that do not depend on the amount of gas are called intensive properties. Specific volume is an example of an intensive property because it is the ratio of volume occupied by a unit of mass of a gas that is identical throughout a system at equilibrium.[17] 1000 atoms a gas occupy the same space as any other 1000 atoms for any given temperature and pressure. This concept is easier to visualize for solids such as iron which are incompressible compared to gases. However, volume itself --- not specific --- is an extensive property.

Density edit

The symbol used to represent density in equations is ρ (rho) with SI units of kilograms per cubic meter. This term is the reciprocal of specific volume.

Since gas molecules can move freely within a container, their mass is normally characterized by density. Density is the amount of mass per unit volume of a substance, or the inverse of specific volume. For gases, the density can vary over a wide range because the particles are free to move closer together when constrained by pressure or volume. This variation of density is referred to as compressibility. Like pressure and temperature, density is a state variable of a gas and the change in density during any process is governed by the laws of thermodynamics. For a static gas, the density is the same throughout the entire container. Density is therefore a scalar quantity. It can be shown by kinetic theory that the density is inversely proportional to the size of the container in which a fixed mass of gas is confined. In this case of a fixed mass, the density decreases as the volume increases.

Microscopic view of gases edit

 
Gas-phase particles (atoms, molecules, or ions) move around freely in the absence of an applied electric field.

If one could observe a gas under a powerful microscope, one would see a collection of particles without any definite shape or volume that are in more or less random motion. These gas particles only change direction when they collide with another particle or with the sides of the container. This microscopic view of gas is well-described by statistical mechanics, but it can be described by many different theories. The kinetic theory of gases, which makes the assumption that these collisions are perfectly elastic, does not account for intermolecular forces of attraction and repulsion.

Kinetic theory of gases edit

Kinetic theory provides insight into the macroscopic properties of gases by considering their molecular composition and motion. Starting with the definitions of momentum and kinetic energy,[18] one can use the conservation of momentum and geometric relationships of a cube to relate macroscopic system properties of temperature and pressure to the microscopic property of kinetic energy per molecule. The theory provides averaged values for these two properties.

The kinetic theory of gases can help explain how the system (the collection of gas particles being considered) responds to changes in temperature, with a corresponding change in kinetic energy.

For example: Imagine you have a sealed container of a fixed-size (a constant volume), containing a fixed-number of gas particles; starting from absolute zero (the theoretical temperature at which atoms or molecules have no thermal energy, i.e. are not moving or vibrating), you begin to add energy to the system by heating the container, so that energy transfers to the particles inside. Once their internal energy is above zero-point energy, meaning their kinetic energy (also known as thermal energy) is non-zero, the gas particles will begin to move around the container. As the box is further heated (as more energy is added), the individual particles increase their average speed as the system's total internal energy increases. The higher average-speed of all the particles leads to a greater rate at which collisions happen (i.e. greater number of collisions per unit of time), between particles and the container, as well as between the particles themselves.

The macroscopic, measurable quantity of pressure, is the direct result of these microscopic particle collisions with the surface, over which, individual molecules exert a small force, each contributing to the total force applied within a specific area. (Read "Pressure" in the above section "Macroscopic view of gases".)

Likewise, the macroscopically measurable quantity of temperature, is a quantification of the overall amount of motion, or kinetic energy that the particles exhibit. (Read "Temperature" in the above section "Macroscopic view of gases".)

Thermal motion and statistical mechanics edit

In the kinetic theory of gases, kinetic energy is assumed to purely consist of linear translations according to a speed distribution of particles in the system. However, in real gases and other real substances, the motions which define the kinetic energy of a system (which collectively determine the temperature), are much more complex than simple linear translation due to the more complex structure of molecules, compared to single atoms which act similarly to point-masses. In real thermodynamic systems, quantum phenomena play a large role in determining thermal motions. The random, thermal motions (kinetic energy) in molecules is a combination of a finite set of possible motions including translation, rotation, and vibration. This finite range of possible motions, along with the finite set of molecules in the system, leads to a finite number of microstates within the system; we call the set of all microstates an ensemble. Specific to atomic or molecular systems, we could potentially have three different kinds of ensemble, depending on the situation: microcanonical ensemble, canonical ensemble, or grand canonical ensemble. Specific combinations of microstates within an ensemble are how we truly define macrostate of the system (temperature, pressure, energy, etc.). In order to do that, we must first count all microstates though use of a partition function. The use of statistical mechanics and the partition function is an important tool throughout all of physical chemistry, because it is the key to connection between the microscopic states of a system and the macroscopic variables which we can measure, such as temperature, pressure, heat capacity, internal energy, enthalpy, and entropy, just to name a few. (Read: Partition function Meaning and significance)

Using the partition function to find the energy of a molecule, or system of molecules, can sometimes be approximated by the Equipartition theorem, which greatly-simplifies calculation. However, this method assumes all molecular degrees of freedom are equally populated, and therefore equally utilized for storing energy within the molecule. It would imply that internal energy changes linearly with temperature, which is not the case. This ignores the fact that heat capacity changes with temperature, due to certain degrees of freedom being unreachable (a.k.a. "frozen out") at lower temperatures. As internal energy of molecules increases, so does the ability to store energy within additional degrees of freedom. As more degrees of freedom become available to hold energy, this causes the molar heat capacity of the substance to increase.[19]

 
Random motion of gas particles results in diffusion.

Brownian motion edit

Brownian motion is the mathematical model used to describe the random movement of particles suspended in a fluid. The gas particle animation, using pink and green particles, illustrates how this behavior results in the spreading out of gases (entropy). These events are also described by particle theory.

Since it is at the limit of (or beyond) current technology to observe individual gas particles (atoms or molecules), only theoretical calculations give suggestions about how they move, but their motion is different from Brownian motion because Brownian motion involves a smooth drag due to the frictional force of many gas molecules, punctuated by violent collisions of an individual (or several) gas molecule(s) with the particle. The particle (generally consisting of millions or billions of atoms) thus moves in a jagged course, yet not so jagged as would be expected if an individual gas molecule were examined.

Intermolecular forces - the primary difference between Real and Ideal gases edit

Forces between two or more molecules or atoms, either attractive or repulsive, are called intermolecular forces. Intermolecular forces are experienced by molecules when they are within physical proximity of one another. These forces are very important for properly modeling molecular systems, as to accurately predict the microscopic behavior of molecules in any system, and therefore, are necessary for accurately predicting the physical properties of gases (and liquids) across wide variations in physical conditions.

Arising from the study of physical chemistry, one of the most prominent intermolecular forces throughout physics, are van der Waals forces. Van der Waals forces play a key role in determining nearly all physical properties of fluids such as viscosity, flow rate, and gas dynamics (see physical characteristics section). The van der Waals interactions between gas molecules, is the reason why modeling a "real gas" is more mathematically difficult than an "ideal gas". Ignoring these proximity-dependent forces allows a real gas to be treated like an ideal gas, which greatly simplifies calculation.

 
Isothermal curves depicting the non-ideality of a real gas. The changes in volume (depicted by Z, compressibility factor) which occur as the pressure is varied. The compressibility factor Z, is equal to the ratio Z = PV/nRT. An ideal gas, with compressibility factor Z = 1, is described by the horizontal line where the y-axis is equal to 1. Non-ideality can be described as the deviation of a gas above or below Z = 1.

The intermolecular attractions and repulsions between two gas molecules are dependent on the amount of distance between them. The combined attractions and repulsions are well-modelled by the Lennard-Jones potential, which is one of the most extensively studied of all interatomic potentials describing the potential energy of molecular systems. The Lennard-Jones potential between molecules can be broken down into two separate components: a long-distance attraction due to the London dispersion force, and a short-range repulsion due to electron-electron exchange interaction (which is related to the Pauli exclusion principle).

When two molecules are relatively distant (meaning they have a high potential energy), they experience a weak attracting force, causing them to move toward each other, lowering their potential energy. However, if the molecules are too far away, then they would not experience attractive force of any significance. Additionally, if the molecules get too close then they will collide, and experience a very high repulsive force (modelled by Hard spheres) which is a much stronger force than the attractions, so that any attraction due to proximity is disregarded.

As two molecules approach each other, from a distance that is neither too-far, nor too-close, their attraction increases as the magnitude of their potential energy increases (becoming more negative), and lowers their total internal energy.[20] The attraction causing the molecules to get closer, can only happen if the molecules remain in proximity for the duration of time it takes to physically move closer. Therefore, the attractive forces are strongest when the molecules move at low speeds. This means that the attraction between molecules is significant when gas temperatures is low. However, if you were to isothermally compress this cold gas into a small volume, forcing the molecules into close proximity, and raising the pressure, the repulsions will begin to dominate over the attractions, as the rate at which collisions are happening will increase significantly. Therefore, at low temperatures, and low pressures, attraction is the dominant intermolecular interaction.

If two molecules are moving at high speeds, in arbitrary directions, along non-intersecting paths, then they will not spend enough time in proximity to be affected by the attractive London-dispersion force. If the two molecules collide, they are moving too fast and their kinetic energy will be much greater than any attractive potential energy, so they will only experience repulsion upon colliding. Thus, attractions between molecules can be neglected at high temperatures due to high speeds. At high temperatures, and high pressures, repulsion is the dominant intermolecular interaction.

Accounting for the above stated effects which cause these attractions and repulsions, real gases, delineate from the ideal gas model by the following generalization:[21]

  • At low temperatures, and low pressures, the volume occupied by a real gas, is less than the volume predicted by the ideal gas law.
  • At high temperatures, and high pressures, the volume occupied by a real gas, is greater than the volume predicted by the ideal gas law.

Mathematical models edit

An equation of state (for gases) is a mathematical model used to roughly describe or predict the state properties of a gas. At present, there is no single equation of state that accurately predicts the properties of all gases under all conditions. Therefore, a number of much more accurate equations of state have been developed for gases in specific temperature and pressure ranges. The "gas models" that are most widely discussed are "perfect gas", "ideal gas" and "real gas". Each of these models has its own set of assumptions to facilitate the analysis of a given thermodynamic system.[22] Each successive model expands the temperature range of coverage to which it applies.

Ideal and perfect gas edit

The equation of state for an ideal or perfect gas is the ideal gas law and reads

 

where P is the pressure, V is the volume, n is amount of gas (in mol units), R is the universal gas constant, 8.314 J/(mol K), and T is the temperature. Written this way, it is sometimes called the "chemist's version", since it emphasizes the number of molecules n. It can also be written as

 

where   is the specific gas constant for a particular gas, in units J/(kg K), and ρ = m/V is density. This notation is the "gas dynamicist's" version, which is more practical in modeling of gas flows involving acceleration without chemical reactions.

The ideal gas law does not make an assumption about the specific heat of a gas. In the most general case, the specific heat is a function of both temperature and pressure. If the pressure-dependence is neglected (and possibly the temperature-dependence as well) in a particular application, sometimes the gas is said to be a perfect gas, although the exact assumptions may vary depending on the author and/or field of science.

For an ideal gas, the ideal gas law applies without restrictions on the specific heat. An ideal gas is a simplified "real gas" with the assumption that the compressibility factor Z is set to 1 meaning that this pneumatic ratio remains constant. A compressibility factor of one also requires the four state variables to follow the ideal gas law.

This approximation is more suitable for applications in engineering although simpler models can be used to produce a "ball-park" range as to where the real solution should lie. An example where the "ideal gas approximation" would be suitable would be inside a combustion chamber of a jet engine.[23] It may also be useful to keep the elementary reactions and chemical dissociations for calculating emissions.

Real gas edit

 
21 April 1990 eruption of Mount Redoubt, Alaska, illustrating real gases not in thermodynamic equilibrium.

Each one of the assumptions listed below adds to the complexity of the problem's solution. As the density of a gas increases with rising pressure, the intermolecular forces play a more substantial role in gas behavior which results in the ideal gas law no longer providing "reasonable" results. At the upper end of the engine temperature ranges (e.g. combustor sections – 1300 K), the complex fuel particles absorb internal energy by means of rotations and vibrations that cause their specific heats to vary from those of diatomic molecules and noble gases. At more than double that temperature, electronic excitation and dissociation of the gas particles begins to occur causing the pressure to adjust to a greater number of particles (transition from gas to plasma).[24] Finally, all of the thermodynamic processes were presumed to describe uniform gases whose velocities varied according to a fixed distribution. Using a non-equilibrium situation implies the flow field must be characterized in some manner to enable a solution. One of the first attempts to expand the boundaries of the ideal gas law was to include coverage for different thermodynamic processes by adjusting the equation to read pVn = constant and then varying the n through different values such as the specific heat ratio, γ.

Real gas effects include those adjustments made to account for a greater range of gas behavior:

For most applications, such a detailed analysis is excessive. Examples where real gas effects would have a significant impact would be on the Space Shuttle re-entry where extremely high temperatures and pressures were present or the gases produced during geological events as in the image of the 1990 eruption of Mount Redoubt.

Permanent gas edit

Permanent gas is a term used for a gas which has a critical temperature below the range of normal human-habitable temperatures and therefore cannot be liquefied by pressure within this range. Historically such gases were thought to be impossible to liquefy and would therefore permanently remain in the gaseous state. The term is relevant to ambient temperature storage and transport of gases at high pressure.[25]

Historical research edit

Boyle's law edit

 
Boyle's equipment

Boyle's law was perhaps the first expression of an equation of state. In 1662 Robert Boyle performed a series of experiments employing a J-shaped glass tube, which was sealed on one end. Mercury was added to the tube, trapping a fixed quantity of air in the short, sealed end of the tube. Then the volume of gas was carefully measured as additional mercury was added to the tube. The pressure of the gas could be determined by the difference between the mercury level in the short end of the tube and that in the long, open end. The image of Boyle's equipment shows some of the exotic tools used by Boyle during his study of gases.

Through these experiments, Boyle noted that the pressure exerted by a gas held at a constant temperature varies inversely with the volume of the gas.[26] For example, if the volume is halved, the pressure is doubled; and if the volume is doubled, the pressure is halved. Given the inverse relationship between pressure and volume, the product of pressure (P) and volume (V) is a constant (k) for a given mass of confined gas as long as the temperature is constant. Stated as a formula, thus is:

 

Because the before and after volumes and pressures of the fixed amount of gas, where the before and after temperatures are the same both equal the constant k, they can be related by the equation:

 

Charles's law edit

In 1787, the French physicist and balloon pioneer, Jacques Charles, found that oxygen, nitrogen, hydrogen, carbon dioxide, and air expand to the same extent over the same 80 kelvin interval. He noted that, for an ideal gas at constant pressure, the volume is directly proportional to its temperature:

 

Gay-Lussac's law edit

In 1802, Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac published results of similar, though more extensive experiments.[27] Gay-Lussac credited Charles' earlier work by naming the law in his honor. Gay-Lussac himself is credited with the law describing pressure, which he found in 1809. It states that the pressure exerted on a container's sides by an ideal gas is proportional to its temperature.

 

Avogadro's law edit

In 1811, Amedeo Avogadro verified that equal volumes of pure gases contain the same number of particles. His theory was not generally accepted until 1858 when another Italian chemist Stanislao Cannizzaro was able to explain non-ideal exceptions. For his work with gases a century prior, the physical constant that bears his name (the Avogadro constant) is the number of atoms per mole of elemental carbon-12 (6.022×1023 mol−1). This specific number of gas particles, at standard temperature and pressure (ideal gas law) occupies 22.40 liters, which is referred to as the molar volume.

Avogadro's law states that the volume occupied by an ideal gas is proportional to the amount of substance in the volume. This gives rise to the molar volume of a gas, which at STP is 22.4 dm3/mol (liters per mole). The relation is given by

 
where n is the amount of substance of gas (the number of molecules divided by the Avogadro constant).

Dalton's law edit

 
Dalton's notation.

In 1801, John Dalton published the law of partial pressures from his work with ideal gas law relationship: The pressure of a mixture of non reactive gases is equal to the sum of the pressures of all of the constituent gases alone. Mathematically, this can be represented for n species as:

Pressuretotal = Pressure1 + Pressure2 + ... + Pressuren

The image of Dalton's journal depicts symbology he used as shorthand to record the path he followed. Among his key journal observations upon mixing unreactive "elastic fluids" (gases) were the following:[28]

  • Unlike liquids, heavier gases did not drift to the bottom upon mixing.
  • Gas particle identity played no role in determining final pressure (they behaved as if their size was negligible).

Special topics edit

Compressibility edit

 
Compressibility factors for air.

Thermodynamicists use this factor (Z) to alter the ideal gas equation to account for compressibility effects of real gases. This factor represents the ratio of actual to ideal specific volumes. It is sometimes referred to as a "fudge-factor" or correction to expand the useful range of the ideal gas law for design purposes. Usually this Z value is very close to unity. The compressibility factor image illustrates how Z varies over a range of very cold temperatures.

Reynolds number edit

In fluid mechanics, the Reynolds number is the ratio of inertial forces (vsρ) to viscous forces (μ/L). It is one of the most important dimensionless numbers in fluid dynamics and is used, usually along with other dimensionless numbers, to provide a criterion for determining dynamic similitude. As such, the Reynolds number provides the link between modeling results (design) and the full-scale actual conditions. It can also be used to characterize the flow.

Viscosity edit

 
Satellite view of weather pattern in vicinity of Robinson Crusoe Islands on 15 September 1999, shows a turbulent cloud pattern called a Kármán vortex street

Viscosity, a physical property, is a measure of how well adjacent molecules stick to one another. A solid can withstand a shearing force due to the strength of these sticky intermolecular forces. A fluid will continuously deform when subjected to a similar load. While a gas has a lower value of viscosity than a liquid, it is still an observable property. If gases had no viscosity, then they would not stick to the surface of a wing and form a boundary layer. A study of the delta wing in the Schlieren image reveals that the gas particles stick to one another (see Boundary layer section).

Turbulence edit

 
Delta wing in wind tunnel. The shadows form as the indices of refraction change within the gas as it compresses on the leading edge of this wing.

In fluid dynamics, turbulence or turbulent flow is a flow regime characterized by chaotic, stochastic property changes. This includes low momentum diffusion, high momentum convection, and rapid variation of pressure and velocity in space and time. The satellite view of weather around Robinson Crusoe Islands illustrates one example.

Boundary layer edit

Particles will, in effect, "stick" to the surface of an object moving through it. This layer of particles is called the boundary layer. At the surface of the object, it is essentially static due to the friction of the surface. The object, with its boundary layer is effectively the new shape of the object that the rest of the molecules "see" as the object approaches. This boundary layer can separate from the surface, essentially creating a new surface and completely changing the flow path. The classical example of this is a stalling airfoil. The delta wing image clearly shows the boundary layer thickening as the gas flows from right to left along the leading edge.

Maximum entropy principle edit

As the total number of degrees of freedom approaches infinity, the system will be found in the macrostate that corresponds to the highest multiplicity. In order to illustrate this principle, observe the skin temperature of a frozen metal bar. Using a thermal image of the skin temperature, note the temperature distribution on the surface. This initial observation of temperature represents a "microstate". At some future time, a second observation of the skin temperature produces a second microstate. By continuing this observation process, it is possible to produce a series of microstates that illustrate the thermal history of the bar's surface. Characterization of this historical series of microstates is possible by choosing the macrostate that successfully classifies them all into a single grouping.

Thermodynamic equilibrium edit

When energy transfer ceases from a system, this condition is referred to as thermodynamic equilibrium. Usually, this condition implies the system and surroundings are at the same temperature so that heat no longer transfers between them. It also implies that external forces are balanced (volume does not change), and all chemical reactions within the system are complete. The timeline varies for these events depending on the system in question. A container of ice allowed to melt at room temperature takes hours, while in semiconductors the heat transfer that occurs in the device transition from an on to off state could be on the order of a few nanoseconds.

Phase transitions of matter ()
To
From
Solid Liquid Gas Plasma
Solid
Melting Sublimation
Liquid Freezing
Vaporization
Gas Deposition Condensation
Ionization
Plasma Recombination

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Gas". Merriam-Webster. 7 August 2023.
  2. ^ This early 20th century discussion infers what is regarded as the plasma state. See page 137 of American Chemical Society, Faraday Society, Chemical Society (Great Britain) The Journal of Physical Chemistry, Volume 11 Cornell (1907).
  3. ^ Zelevinsky, Tanya (2009-11-09). "—just right for forming a Bose-Einstein condensate". Physics. 2 (20): 94. arXiv:0910.0634. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.103.200401. PMID 20365964. S2CID 14321276.
  4. ^ "Quantum Gas Microscope Offers Glimpse Of Quirky Ultracold Atoms". ScienceDaily. Retrieved 2023-02-06.
  5. ^ Helmont, Jan Baptist Van (1652). Ortus medicine, id est initial physicae inaudita... authore Joanne Baptista Van Helmont,... (in Latin). apud L. Elzevirium. The word "gas" first appears on page 58, where he mentions: "... Gas (meum scil. inventum) ..." (... gas (namely, my discovery) ...). On page 59, he states: "... in nominis egestate, halitum illum, Gas vocavi, non longe a Chao ..." (... in need of a name, I called this vapor "gas", not far from "chaos" ...)
  6. ^ Ley, Willy (June 1966). "The Re-Designed Solar System". For Your Information. Galaxy Science Fiction. pp. 94–106.
  7. ^ Harper, Douglas. "gas". Online Etymology Dictionary.
  8. ^ Draper, John William (1861). A textbook on chemistry. New York: Harper and Sons. p. 178.
  9. ^ ""gas, n.1 and adj."". OED Online. Oxford University Press. June 2021. There is probably no foundation in the idea (found from the 18th cent. onwards, e.g. in J. Priestley On Air (1774) Introd. 3) that van Helmont modelled gas on Dutch geest spirit, or any of its cognates
  10. ^ Barzun, Jacques (2000). For Dawn to Decadence: 500 Years of Western Cultural Life. New York: HarperCollins Publishers. p. 199.
  11. ^ The authors make the connection between molecular forces of metals and their corresponding physical properties. By extension, this concept would apply to gases as well, though not universally. Cornell (1907) pp. 164–5.
  12. ^ One noticeable exception to this physical property connection is conductivity which varies depending on the state of matter (ionic compounds in water) as described by Michael Faraday in 1833 when he noted that ice does not conduct a current. See page 45 of John Tyndall's Faraday as a Discoverer (1868).
  13. ^ John S. Hutchinson (2008). Concept Development Studies in Chemistry. p. 67.
  14. ^ Anderson, p.501
  15. ^ J. Clerk Maxwell (1904). Theory of Heat. Mineola: Dover Publications. pp. 319–20. ISBN 978-0-486-41735-6.
  16. ^ See pages 137–8 of Society, Cornell (1907).
  17. ^ Kenneth Wark (1977). Thermodynamics (3 ed.). McGraw-Hill. p. 12. ISBN 978-0-07-068280-1.
  18. ^ For assumptions of kinetic theory see McPherson, pp.60–61
  19. ^ Jeschke, Gunnar (26 November 2020). "Canonical Ensemble". from the original on 2021-05-20.
  20. ^ . 2020-08-22. Archived from the original on 2020-08-22. Retrieved 2021-05-20.
  21. ^ . 2021-02-06. Archived from the original on 2021-02-06. Retrieved 2021-05-20.
  22. ^ Anderson, pp. 289–291
  23. ^ John, p.205
  24. ^ John, pp. 247–56
  25. ^ "Permanent gas". www.oxfordreference.com. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 3 April 2021.
  26. ^ McPherson, pp.52–55
  27. ^ McPherson, pp.55–60
  28. ^ John P. Millington (1906). John Dalton. pp. 72, 77–78.

References edit

Further reading edit

  • Philip Hill and Carl Peterson. Mechanics and Thermodynamics of Propulsion: Second Edition Addison-Wesley, 1992. ISBN 0-201-14659-2
  • National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). . Accessed February 2008.
  • Georgia State University. HyperPhysics. Accessed February 2008.
  • Antony Lewis WordWeb. Accessed February 2008.
  • Northwestern Michigan College . Accessed February 2008.
  • Lewes, Vivian Byam; Lunge, Georg (1911). "Gas" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 11 (11th ed.). p. 481–493.

this, article, about, state, matter, liquified, petroleum, used, automotive, fuel, autogas, gasoline, gasoline, uses, gases, other, meanings, disambiguation, four, fundamental, states, matter, others, solid, liquid, plasma, drifting, smoke, particles, indicate. This article is about the state of matter For liquified petroleum gas used as an automotive fuel see autogas For gasoline gas see gasoline For the uses of gases and other meanings see Gas disambiguation Gas is one of the four fundamental states of matter The others are solid liquid and plasma 1 Drifting smoke particles indicate the movement of the surrounding gas A pure gas may be made up of individual atoms e g a noble gas like neon elemental molecules made from one type of atom e g oxygen or compound molecules made from a variety of atoms e g carbon dioxide A gas mixture such as air contains a variety of pure gases What distinguishes gases from liquids and solids is the vast separation of the individual gas particles This separation usually makes a colorless gas invisible to the human observer The gaseous state of matter occurs between the liquid and plasma states 2 the latter of which provides the upper temperature boundary for gases Bounding the lower end of the temperature scale lie degenerative quantum gases 3 which are gaining increasing attention 4 High density atomic gases super cooled to very low temperatures are classified by their statistical behavior as either Bose gases or Fermi gases For a comprehensive listing of these exotic states of matter see list of states of matter Contents 1 Elemental gases 2 Etymology 3 Physical characteristics 4 Macroscopic view of gases 4 1 Pressure 4 2 Temperature 4 3 Specific volume 4 4 Density 5 Microscopic view of gases 5 1 Kinetic theory of gases 5 2 Thermal motion and statistical mechanics 5 3 Brownian motion 5 4 Intermolecular forces the primary difference between Real and Ideal gases 6 Mathematical models 6 1 Ideal and perfect gas 6 2 Real gas 6 3 Permanent gas 7 Historical research 7 1 Boyle s law 7 2 Charles s law 7 3 Gay Lussac s law 7 4 Avogadro s law 7 5 Dalton s law 8 Special topics 8 1 Compressibility 8 2 Reynolds number 8 3 Viscosity 8 4 Turbulence 8 5 Boundary layer 8 6 Maximum entropy principle 8 7 Thermodynamic equilibrium 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Further readingElemental gases editThe only chemical elements that are stable diatomic homonuclear molecular gases at STP are hydrogen H2 nitrogen N2 oxygen O2 and two halogens fluorine F2 and chlorine Cl2 When grouped with the monatomic noble gases helium He neon Ne argon Ar krypton Kr xenon Xe and radon Rn these gases are referred to as elemental gases Etymology editThe word gas was first used by the early 17th century Flemish chemist Jan Baptist van Helmont 5 He identified carbon dioxide the first known gas other than air 6 Van Helmont s word appears to have been simply a phonetic transcription of the Ancient Greek word xaos chaos the g in Dutch being pronounced like ch in loch voiceless velar fricative x in which case Van Helmont simply was following the established alchemical usage first attested in the works of Paracelsus According to Paracelsus s terminology chaos meant something like ultra rarefied water 7 An alternative story is that Van Helmont s term was derived from gahst or geist which signifies a ghost or spirit 8 That story is given no credence by the editors of the Oxford English Dictionary 9 In contrast the French American historian Jacques Barzun speculated that Van Helmont had borrowed the word from the German Gascht meaning the froth resulting from fermentation 10 Physical characteristics editBecause most gases are difficult to observe directly they are described through the use of four physical properties or macroscopic characteristics pressure volume number of particles chemists group them by moles and temperature These four characteristics were repeatedly observed by scientists such as Robert Boyle Jacques Charles John Dalton Joseph Gay Lussac and Amedeo Avogadro for a variety of gases in various settings Their detailed studies ultimately led to a mathematical relationship among these properties expressed by the ideal gas law see simplified models section below Gas particles are widely separated from one another and consequently have weaker intermolecular bonds than liquids or solids These intermolecular forces result from electrostatic interactions between gas particles Like charged areas of different gas particles repel while oppositely charged regions of different gas particles attract one another gases that contain permanently charged ions are known as plasmas Gaseous compounds with polar covalent bonds contain permanent charge imbalances and so experience relatively strong intermolecular forces although the compound s net charge remains neutral Transient randomly induced charges exist across non polar covalent bonds of molecules and electrostatic interactions caused by them are referred to as Van der Waals forces The interaction of these intermolecular forces varies within a substance which determines many of the physical properties unique to each gas 11 12 A comparison of boiling points for compounds formed by ionic and covalent bonds leads us to this conclusion 13 Compared to the other states of matter gases have low density and viscosity Pressure and temperature influence the particles within a certain volume This variation in particle separation and speed is referred to as compressibility This particle separation and size influences optical properties of gases as can be found in the following list of refractive indices Finally gas particles spread apart or diffuse in order to homogeneously distribute themselves throughout any container Macroscopic view of gases edit nbsp Shuttle imagery of re entry phaseSee also Gas kinetics When observing a gas it is typical to specify a frame of reference or length scale A larger length scale corresponds to a macroscopic or global point of view of the gas This region referred to as a volume must be sufficient in size to contain a large sampling of gas particles The resulting statistical analysis of this sample size produces the average behavior i e velocity temperature or pressure of all the gas particles within the region In contrast a smaller length scale corresponds to a microscopic or particle point of view Macroscopically the gas characteristics measured are either in terms of the gas particles themselves velocity pressure or temperature or their surroundings volume For example Robert Boyle studied pneumatic chemistry for a small portion of his career One of his experiments related the macroscopic properties of pressure and volume of a gas His experiment used a J tube manometer which looks like a test tube in the shape of the letter J Boyle trapped an inert gas in the closed end of the test tube with a column of mercury thereby making the number of particles and the temperature constant He observed that when the pressure was increased in the gas by adding more mercury to the column the trapped gas volume decreased this is known as an inverse relationship Furthermore when Boyle multiplied the pressure and volume of each observation the product was constant This relationship held for every gas that Boyle observed leading to the law PV k named to honor his work in this field There are many mathematical tools available for analyzing gas properties As gases are subjected to extreme conditions these tools become more complex from the Euler equations for inviscid flow to the Navier Stokes equations 14 that fully account for viscous effects These equations are adapted to the conditions of the gas system in question Boyle s lab equipment allowed the use of algebra to obtain his analytical results His results were possible because he was studying gases in relatively low pressure situations where they behaved in an ideal manner These ideal relationships apply to safety calculations for a variety of flight conditions on the materials in use The high technology equipment in use today was designed to help us safely explore the more exotic operating environments where the gases no longer behave in an ideal manner This advanced math including statistics and multivariable calculus makes possible the solution to such complex dynamic situations as space vehicle reentry An example is the analysis of the space shuttle reentry pictured to ensure the material properties under this loading condition are appropriate In this flight regime the gas is no longer behaving ideally Pressure edit Main article Pressure The symbol used to represent pressure in equations is p or P with SI units of pascals When describing a container of gas the term pressure or absolute pressure refers to the average force per unit area that the gas exerts on the surface of the container Within this volume it is sometimes easier to visualize the gas particles moving in straight lines until they collide with the container see diagram at top of the article The force imparted by a gas particle into the container during this collision is the change in momentum of the particle 15 During a collision only the normal component of velocity changes A particle traveling parallel to the wall does not change its momentum Therefore the average force on a surface must be the average change in linear momentum from all of these gas particle collisions Pressure is the sum of all the normal components of force exerted by the particles impacting the walls of the container divided by the surface area of the wall Temperature edit source source source source Air balloon shrinks after submersion in liquid nitrogenMain article Thermodynamic temperatureThe symbol used to represent temperature in equations is T with SI units of kelvins The speed of a gas particle is proportional to its absolute temperature The volume of the balloon in the video shrinks when the trapped gas particles slow down with the addition of extremely cold nitrogen The temperature of any physical system is related to the motions of the particles molecules and atoms which make up the gas system 16 In statistical mechanics temperature is the measure of the average kinetic energy stored in a molecule also known as the thermal energy The methods of storing this energy are dictated by the degrees of freedom of the molecule itself energy modes Thermal kinetic energy added to a gas or liquid an endothermic process produces translational rotational and vibrational motion In contrast a solid can only increase its internal energy by exciting additional vibrational modes as the crystal lattice structure prevents both translational and rotational motion These heated gas molecules have a greater speed range wider distribution of speeds with a higher average or mean speed The variance of this distribution is due to the speeds of individual particles constantly varying due to repeated collisions with other particles The speed range can be described by the Maxwell Boltzmann distribution Use of this distribution implies ideal gases near thermodynamic equilibrium for the system of particles being considered Specific volume edit Main article Specific volume The symbol used to represent specific volume in equations is v with SI units of cubic meters per kilogram See also Gas volume The symbol used to represent volume in equations is V with SI units of cubic meters When performing a thermodynamic analysis it is typical to speak of intensive and extensive properties Properties which depend on the amount of gas either by mass or volume are called extensive properties while properties that do not depend on the amount of gas are called intensive properties Specific volume is an example of an intensive property because it is the ratio of volume occupied by a unit of mass of a gas that is identical throughout a system at equilibrium 17 1000 atoms a gas occupy the same space as any other 1000 atoms for any given temperature and pressure This concept is easier to visualize for solids such as iron which are incompressible compared to gases However volume itself not specific is an extensive property Density edit Main article Density The symbol used to represent density in equations is r rho with SI units of kilograms per cubic meter This term is the reciprocal of specific volume Since gas molecules can move freely within a container their mass is normally characterized by density Density is the amount of mass per unit volume of a substance or the inverse of specific volume For gases the density can vary over a wide range because the particles are free to move closer together when constrained by pressure or volume This variation of density is referred to as compressibility Like pressure and temperature density is a state variable of a gas and the change in density during any process is governed by the laws of thermodynamics For a static gas the density is the same throughout the entire container Density is therefore a scalar quantity It can be shown by kinetic theory that the density is inversely proportional to the size of the container in which a fixed mass of gas is confined In this case of a fixed mass the density decreases as the volume increases Microscopic view of gases edit nbsp Gas phase particles atoms molecules or ions move around freely in the absence of an applied electric field If one could observe a gas under a powerful microscope one would see a collection of particles without any definite shape or volume that are in more or less random motion These gas particles only change direction when they collide with another particle or with the sides of the container This microscopic view of gas is well described by statistical mechanics but it can be described by many different theories The kinetic theory of gases which makes the assumption that these collisions are perfectly elastic does not account for intermolecular forces of attraction and repulsion Kinetic theory of gases edit Main articles Kinetic theory of gases and Maxwell Boltzmann distribution Kinetic theory provides insight into the macroscopic properties of gases by considering their molecular composition and motion Starting with the definitions of momentum and kinetic energy 18 one can use the conservation of momentum and geometric relationships of a cube to relate macroscopic system properties of temperature and pressure to the microscopic property of kinetic energy per molecule The theory provides averaged values for these two properties The kinetic theory of gases can help explain how the system the collection of gas particles being considered responds to changes in temperature with a corresponding change in kinetic energy For example Imagine you have a sealed container of a fixed size a constant volume containing a fixed number of gas particles starting from absolute zero the theoretical temperature at which atoms or molecules have no thermal energy i e are not moving or vibrating you begin to add energy to the system by heating the container so that energy transfers to the particles inside Once their internal energy is above zero point energy meaning their kinetic energy also known as thermal energy is non zero the gas particles will begin to move around the container As the box is further heated as more energy is added the individual particles increase their average speed as the system s total internal energy increases The higher average speed of all the particles leads to a greater rate at which collisions happen i e greater number of collisions per unit of time between particles and the container as well as between the particles themselves The macroscopic measurable quantity of pressure is the direct result of these microscopic particle collisions with the surface over which individual molecules exert a small force each contributing to the total force applied within a specific area Read Pressure in the above section Macroscopic view of gases Likewise the macroscopically measurable quantity of temperature is a quantification of the overall amount of motion or kinetic energy that the particles exhibit Read Temperature in the above section Macroscopic view of gases Thermal motion and statistical mechanics edit In the kinetic theory of gases kinetic energy is assumed to purely consist of linear translations according to a speed distribution of particles in the system However in real gases and other real substances the motions which define the kinetic energy of a system which collectively determine the temperature are much more complex than simple linear translation due to the more complex structure of molecules compared to single atoms which act similarly to point masses In real thermodynamic systems quantum phenomena play a large role in determining thermal motions The random thermal motions kinetic energy in molecules is a combination of a finite set of possible motions including translation rotation and vibration This finite range of possible motions along with the finite set of molecules in the system leads to a finite number of microstates within the system we call the set of all microstates an ensemble Specific to atomic or molecular systems we could potentially have three different kinds of ensemble depending on the situation microcanonical ensemble canonical ensemble or grand canonical ensemble Specific combinations of microstates within an ensemble are how we truly define macrostate of the system temperature pressure energy etc In order to do that we must first count all microstates though use of a partition function The use of statistical mechanics and the partition function is an important tool throughout all of physical chemistry because it is the key to connection between the microscopic states of a system and the macroscopic variables which we can measure such as temperature pressure heat capacity internal energy enthalpy and entropy just to name a few Read Partition function Meaning and significance Using the partition function to find the energy of a molecule or system of molecules can sometimes be approximated by the Equipartition theorem which greatly simplifies calculation However this method assumes all molecular degrees of freedom are equally populated and therefore equally utilized for storing energy within the molecule It would imply that internal energy changes linearly with temperature which is not the case This ignores the fact that heat capacity changes with temperature due to certain degrees of freedom being unreachable a k a frozen out at lower temperatures As internal energy of molecules increases so does the ability to store energy within additional degrees of freedom As more degrees of freedom become available to hold energy this causes the molar heat capacity of the substance to increase 19 nbsp Random motion of gas particles results in diffusion Brownian motion edit Main article Brownian motionBrownian motion is the mathematical model used to describe the random movement of particles suspended in a fluid The gas particle animation using pink and green particles illustrates how this behavior results in the spreading out of gases entropy These events are also described by particle theory Since it is at the limit of or beyond current technology to observe individual gas particles atoms or molecules only theoretical calculations give suggestions about how they move but their motion is different from Brownian motion because Brownian motion involves a smooth drag due to the frictional force of many gas molecules punctuated by violent collisions of an individual or several gas molecule s with the particle The particle generally consisting of millions or billions of atoms thus moves in a jagged course yet not so jagged as would be expected if an individual gas molecule were examined Intermolecular forces the primary difference between Real and Ideal gases edit Main articles van der Waals force Intermolecular force and Lennard Jones potential Forces between two or more molecules or atoms either attractive or repulsive are called intermolecular forces Intermolecular forces are experienced by molecules when they are within physical proximity of one another These forces are very important for properly modeling molecular systems as to accurately predict the microscopic behavior of molecules in any system and therefore are necessary for accurately predicting the physical properties of gases and liquids across wide variations in physical conditions Arising from the study of physical chemistry one of the most prominent intermolecular forces throughout physics are van der Waals forces Van der Waals forces play a key role in determining nearly all physical properties of fluids such as viscosity flow rate and gas dynamics see physical characteristics section The van der Waals interactions between gas molecules is the reason why modeling a real gas is more mathematically difficult than an ideal gas Ignoring these proximity dependent forces allows a real gas to be treated like an ideal gas which greatly simplifies calculation nbsp Isothermal curves depicting the non ideality of a real gas The changes in volume depicted by Z compressibility factor which occur as the pressure is varied The compressibility factor Z is equal to the ratio Z PV nRT An ideal gas with compressibility factor Z 1 is described by the horizontal line where the y axis is equal to 1 Non ideality can be described as the deviation of a gas above or below Z 1 The intermolecular attractions and repulsions between two gas molecules are dependent on the amount of distance between them The combined attractions and repulsions are well modelled by the Lennard Jones potential which is one of the most extensively studied of all interatomic potentials describing the potential energy of molecular systems The Lennard Jones potential between molecules can be broken down into two separate components a long distance attraction due to the London dispersion force and a short range repulsion due to electron electron exchange interaction which is related to the Pauli exclusion principle When two molecules are relatively distant meaning they have a high potential energy they experience a weak attracting force causing them to move toward each other lowering their potential energy However if the molecules are too far away then they would not experience attractive force of any significance Additionally if the molecules get too close then they will collide and experience a very high repulsive force modelled by Hard spheres which is a much stronger force than the attractions so that any attraction due to proximity is disregarded As two molecules approach each other from a distance that is neither too far nor too close their attraction increases as the magnitude of their potential energy increases becoming more negative and lowers their total internal energy 20 The attraction causing the molecules to get closer can only happen if the molecules remain in proximity for the duration of time it takes to physically move closer Therefore the attractive forces are strongest when the molecules move at low speeds This means that the attraction between molecules is significant when gas temperatures is low However if you were to isothermally compress this cold gas into a small volume forcing the molecules into close proximity and raising the pressure the repulsions will begin to dominate over the attractions as the rate at which collisions are happening will increase significantly Therefore at low temperatures and low pressures attraction is the dominant intermolecular interaction If two molecules are moving at high speeds in arbitrary directions along non intersecting paths then they will not spend enough time in proximity to be affected by the attractive London dispersion force If the two molecules collide they are moving too fast and their kinetic energy will be much greater than any attractive potential energy so they will only experience repulsion upon colliding Thus attractions between molecules can be neglected at high temperatures due to high speeds At high temperatures and high pressures repulsion is the dominant intermolecular interaction Accounting for the above stated effects which cause these attractions and repulsions real gases delineate from the ideal gas model by the following generalization 21 At low temperatures and low pressures the volume occupied by a real gas is less than the volume predicted by the ideal gas law At high temperatures and high pressures the volume occupied by a real gas is greater than the volume predicted by the ideal gas law Mathematical models editMain article Equation of state An equation of state for gases is a mathematical model used to roughly describe or predict the state properties of a gas At present there is no single equation of state that accurately predicts the properties of all gases under all conditions Therefore a number of much more accurate equations of state have been developed for gases in specific temperature and pressure ranges The gas models that are most widely discussed are perfect gas ideal gas and real gas Each of these models has its own set of assumptions to facilitate the analysis of a given thermodynamic system 22 Each successive model expands the temperature range of coverage to which it applies Ideal and perfect gas edit Main article Perfect gas The equation of state for an ideal or perfect gas is the ideal gas law and reads P V n R T displaystyle PV nRT nbsp where P is the pressure V is the volume n is amount of gas in mol units R is the universal gas constant 8 314 J mol K and T is the temperature Written this way it is sometimes called the chemist s version since it emphasizes the number of molecules n It can also be written as P r R s T displaystyle P rho R s T nbsp where R s displaystyle R s nbsp is the specific gas constant for a particular gas in units J kg K and r m V is density This notation is the gas dynamicist s version which is more practical in modeling of gas flows involving acceleration without chemical reactions The ideal gas law does not make an assumption about the specific heat of a gas In the most general case the specific heat is a function of both temperature and pressure If the pressure dependence is neglected and possibly the temperature dependence as well in a particular application sometimes the gas is said to be a perfect gas although the exact assumptions may vary depending on the author and or field of science For an ideal gas the ideal gas law applies without restrictions on the specific heat An ideal gas is a simplified real gas with the assumption that the compressibility factor Z is set to 1 meaning that this pneumatic ratio remains constant A compressibility factor of one also requires the four state variables to follow the ideal gas law This approximation is more suitable for applications in engineering although simpler models can be used to produce a ball park range as to where the real solution should lie An example where the ideal gas approximation would be suitable would be inside a combustion chamber of a jet engine 23 It may also be useful to keep the elementary reactions and chemical dissociations for calculating emissions Real gas edit nbsp 21 April 1990 eruption of Mount Redoubt Alaska illustrating real gases not in thermodynamic equilibrium Main article Real gas Each one of the assumptions listed below adds to the complexity of the problem s solution As the density of a gas increases with rising pressure the intermolecular forces play a more substantial role in gas behavior which results in the ideal gas law no longer providing reasonable results At the upper end of the engine temperature ranges e g combustor sections 1300 K the complex fuel particles absorb internal energy by means of rotations and vibrations that cause their specific heats to vary from those of diatomic molecules and noble gases At more than double that temperature electronic excitation and dissociation of the gas particles begins to occur causing the pressure to adjust to a greater number of particles transition from gas to plasma 24 Finally all of the thermodynamic processes were presumed to describe uniform gases whose velocities varied according to a fixed distribution Using a non equilibrium situation implies the flow field must be characterized in some manner to enable a solution One of the first attempts to expand the boundaries of the ideal gas law was to include coverage for different thermodynamic processes by adjusting the equation to read pVn constant and then varying the n through different values such as the specific heat ratio g Real gas effects include those adjustments made to account for a greater range of gas behavior Compressibility effects Z allowed to vary from 1 0 Variable heat capacity specific heats vary with temperature Van der Waals forces related to compressibility can substitute other equations of state Non equilibrium thermodynamic effects Issues with molecular dissociation and elementary reactions with variable composition For most applications such a detailed analysis is excessive Examples where real gas effects would have a significant impact would be on the Space Shuttle re entry where extremely high temperatures and pressures were present or the gases produced during geological events as in the image of the 1990 eruption of Mount Redoubt Permanent gas edit Permanent gas is a term used for a gas which has a critical temperature below the range of normal human habitable temperatures and therefore cannot be liquefied by pressure within this range Historically such gases were thought to be impossible to liquefy and would therefore permanently remain in the gaseous state The term is relevant to ambient temperature storage and transport of gases at high pressure 25 Historical research editSee also Gas laws See also Timeline of fluid and continuum mechanics Boyle s law edit nbsp Boyle s equipmentMain article Boyle s law Boyle s law was perhaps the first expression of an equation of state In 1662 Robert Boyle performed a series of experiments employing a J shaped glass tube which was sealed on one end Mercury was added to the tube trapping a fixed quantity of air in the short sealed end of the tube Then the volume of gas was carefully measured as additional mercury was added to the tube The pressure of the gas could be determined by the difference between the mercury level in the short end of the tube and that in the long open end The image of Boyle s equipment shows some of the exotic tools used by Boyle during his study of gases Through these experiments Boyle noted that the pressure exerted by a gas held at a constant temperature varies inversely with the volume of the gas 26 For example if the volume is halved the pressure is doubled and if the volume is doubled the pressure is halved Given the inverse relationship between pressure and volume the product of pressure P and volume V is a constant k for a given mass of confined gas as long as the temperature is constant Stated as a formula thus is P V k displaystyle PV k nbsp Because the before and after volumes and pressures of the fixed amount of gas where the before and after temperatures are the same both equal the constant k they can be related by the equation P 1 V 1 P 2 V 2 displaystyle qquad P 1 V 1 P 2 V 2 nbsp Charles s law edit Main article Charles s law In 1787 the French physicist and balloon pioneer Jacques Charles found that oxygen nitrogen hydrogen carbon dioxide and air expand to the same extent over the same 80 kelvin interval He noted that for an ideal gas at constant pressure the volume is directly proportional to its temperature V 1 T 1 V 2 T 2 displaystyle frac V 1 T 1 frac V 2 T 2 nbsp Gay Lussac s law edit Main article Gay Lussac s law In 1802 Joseph Louis Gay Lussac published results of similar though more extensive experiments 27 Gay Lussac credited Charles earlier work by naming the law in his honor Gay Lussac himself is credited with the law describing pressure which he found in 1809 It states that the pressure exerted on a container s sides by an ideal gas is proportional to its temperature P 1 T 1 P 2 T 2 displaystyle frac P 1 T 1 frac P 2 T 2 nbsp Avogadro s law edit Main article Avogadro s law In 1811 Amedeo Avogadro verified that equal volumes of pure gases contain the same number of particles His theory was not generally accepted until 1858 when another Italian chemist Stanislao Cannizzaro was able to explain non ideal exceptions For his work with gases a century prior the physical constant that bears his name the Avogadro constant is the number of atoms per mole of elemental carbon 12 6 022 1023 mol 1 This specific number of gas particles at standard temperature and pressure ideal gas law occupies 22 40 liters which is referred to as the molar volume Avogadro s law states that the volume occupied by an ideal gas is proportional to the amount of substance in the volume This gives rise to the molar volume of a gas which at STP is 22 4 dm3 mol liters per mole The relation is given byV 1 n 1 V 2 n 2 displaystyle frac V 1 n 1 frac V 2 n 2 nbsp where n is the amount of substance of gas the number of molecules divided by the Avogadro constant Dalton s law edit nbsp Dalton s notation Main article Dalton s law In 1801 John Dalton published the law of partial pressures from his work with ideal gas law relationship The pressure of a mixture of non reactive gases is equal to the sum of the pressures of all of the constituent gases alone Mathematically this can be represented for n species as Pressuretotal Pressure1 Pressure2 PressurenThe image of Dalton s journal depicts symbology he used as shorthand to record the path he followed Among his key journal observations upon mixing unreactive elastic fluids gases were the following 28 Unlike liquids heavier gases did not drift to the bottom upon mixing Gas particle identity played no role in determining final pressure they behaved as if their size was negligible Special topics editCompressibility edit nbsp Compressibility factors for air Main article Compressibility factor Thermodynamicists use this factor Z to alter the ideal gas equation to account for compressibility effects of real gases This factor represents the ratio of actual to ideal specific volumes It is sometimes referred to as a fudge factor or correction to expand the useful range of the ideal gas law for design purposes Usually this Z value is very close to unity The compressibility factor image illustrates how Z varies over a range of very cold temperatures Reynolds number edit Main article Reynolds number In fluid mechanics the Reynolds number is the ratio of inertial forces vsr to viscous forces m L It is one of the most important dimensionless numbers in fluid dynamics and is used usually along with other dimensionless numbers to provide a criterion for determining dynamic similitude As such the Reynolds number provides the link between modeling results design and the full scale actual conditions It can also be used to characterize the flow Viscosity edit nbsp Satellite view of weather pattern in vicinity of Robinson Crusoe Islands on 15 September 1999 shows a turbulent cloud pattern called a Karman vortex streetMain article Viscosity Viscosity a physical property is a measure of how well adjacent molecules stick to one another A solid can withstand a shearing force due to the strength of these sticky intermolecular forces A fluid will continuously deform when subjected to a similar load While a gas has a lower value of viscosity than a liquid it is still an observable property If gases had no viscosity then they would not stick to the surface of a wing and form a boundary layer A study of the delta wing in the Schlieren image reveals that the gas particles stick to one another see Boundary layer section Turbulence edit nbsp Delta wing in wind tunnel The shadows form as the indices of refraction change within the gas as it compresses on the leading edge of this wing Main article Turbulence In fluid dynamics turbulence or turbulent flow is a flow regime characterized by chaotic stochastic property changes This includes low momentum diffusion high momentum convection and rapid variation of pressure and velocity in space and time The satellite view of weather around Robinson Crusoe Islands illustrates one example Boundary layer edit Main article Boundary layer Particles will in effect stick to the surface of an object moving through it This layer of particles is called the boundary layer At the surface of the object it is essentially static due to the friction of the surface The object with its boundary layer is effectively the new shape of the object that the rest of the molecules see as the object approaches This boundary layer can separate from the surface essentially creating a new surface and completely changing the flow path The classical example of this is a stalling airfoil The delta wing image clearly shows the boundary layer thickening as the gas flows from right to left along the leading edge Maximum entropy principle edit Main article Principle of maximum entropy As the total number of degrees of freedom approaches infinity the system will be found in the macrostate that corresponds to the highest multiplicity In order to illustrate this principle observe the skin temperature of a frozen metal bar Using a thermal image of the skin temperature note the temperature distribution on the surface This initial observation of temperature represents a microstate At some future time a second observation of the skin temperature produces a second microstate By continuing this observation process it is possible to produce a series of microstates that illustrate the thermal history of the bar s surface Characterization of this historical series of microstates is possible by choosing the macrostate that successfully classifies them all into a single grouping Thermodynamic equilibrium edit Main article Thermodynamic equilibrium When energy transfer ceases from a system this condition is referred to as thermodynamic equilibrium Usually this condition implies the system and surroundings are at the same temperature so that heat no longer transfers between them It also implies that external forces are balanced volume does not change and all chemical reactions within the system are complete The timeline varies for these events depending on the system in question A container of ice allowed to melt at room temperature takes hours while in semiconductors the heat transfer that occurs in the device transition from an on to off state could be on the order of a few nanoseconds Phase transitions of matter vte ToFrom Solid Liquid Gas PlasmaSolid Melting SublimationLiquid Freezing VaporizationGas Deposition Condensation IonizationPlasma RecombinationSee also editGreenhouse gas List of gases Natural gas Volcanic gas Breathing gas WindNotes edit Gas Merriam Webster 7 August 2023 This early 20th century discussion infers what is regarded as the plasma state See page 137 of American Chemical Society Faraday Society Chemical Society Great Britain The Journal of Physical Chemistry Volume 11 Cornell 1907 Zelevinsky Tanya 2009 11 09 just right for forming a Bose Einstein condensate Physics 2 20 94 arXiv 0910 0634 doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 103 200401 PMID 20365964 S2CID 14321276 Quantum Gas Microscope Offers Glimpse Of Quirky Ultracold Atoms ScienceDaily Retrieved 2023 02 06 Helmont Jan Baptist Van 1652 Ortus medicine id est initial physicae inaudita authore Joanne Baptista Van Helmont in Latin apud L Elzevirium The word gas first appears on page 58 where he mentions Gas meum scil inventum gas namely my discovery On page 59 he states in nominis egestate halitum illum Gas vocavi non longe a Chao in need of a name I called this vapor gas not far from chaos Ley Willy June 1966 The Re Designed Solar System For Your Information Galaxy Science Fiction pp 94 106 Harper Douglas gas Online Etymology Dictionary Draper John William 1861 A textbook on chemistry New York Harper and Sons p 178 gas n 1 and adj OED Online Oxford University Press June 2021 There is probably no foundation in the idea found from the 18th cent onwards e g in J Priestley On Air 1774 Introd 3 that van Helmont modelled gas on Dutch geest spirit or any of its cognates Barzun Jacques 2000 For Dawn to Decadence 500 Years of Western Cultural Life New York HarperCollins Publishers p 199 The authors make the connection between molecular forces of metals and their corresponding physical properties By extension this concept would apply to gases as well though not universally Cornell 1907 pp 164 5 One noticeable exception to this physical property connection is conductivity which varies depending on the state of matter ionic compounds in water as described by Michael Faraday in 1833 when he noted that ice does not conduct a current See page 45 of John Tyndall s Faraday as a Discoverer 1868 John S Hutchinson 2008 Concept Development Studies in Chemistry p 67 Anderson p 501 J Clerk Maxwell 1904 Theory of Heat Mineola Dover Publications pp 319 20 ISBN 978 0 486 41735 6 See pages 137 8 of Society Cornell 1907 Kenneth Wark 1977 Thermodynamics 3 ed McGraw Hill p 12 ISBN 978 0 07 068280 1 For assumptions of kinetic theory see McPherson pp 60 61 Jeschke Gunnar 26 November 2020 Canonical Ensemble Archived from the original on 2021 05 20 Lennard Jones Potential Chemistry LibreTexts 2020 08 22 Archived from the original on 2020 08 22 Retrieved 2021 05 20 14 11 Real and Ideal Gases Chemistry LibreTexts 2021 02 06 Archived from the original on 2021 02 06 Retrieved 2021 05 20 Anderson pp 289 291 John p 205 John pp 247 56 Permanent gas www oxfordreference com Oxford University Press Retrieved 3 April 2021 McPherson pp 52 55 McPherson pp 55 60 John P Millington 1906 John Dalton pp 72 77 78 References editAnderson John D 1984 Fundamentals of Aerodynamics McGraw Hill Higher Education ISBN 978 0 07 001656 9 John James 1984 Gas Dynamics Allyn and Bacon ISBN 978 0 205 08014 4 McPherson William Henderson William 1917 An Elementary study of chemistry Further reading edit nbsp Look up gas in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gases Philip Hill and Carl Peterson Mechanics and Thermodynamics of Propulsion Second Edition Addison Wesley 1992 ISBN 0 201 14659 2 National Aeronautics and Space Administration NASA Animated Gas Lab Accessed February 2008 Georgia State University HyperPhysics Accessed February 2008 Antony Lewis WordWeb Accessed February 2008 Northwestern Michigan College The Gaseous State Accessed February 2008 Lewes Vivian Byam Lunge Georg 1911 Gas Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 11 11th ed p 481 493 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gas amp oldid 1191704193, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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