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Molar Specific Heat: T Is The Same For E

This document discusses molar specific heats for gases. It defines specific heats for constant pressure and constant volume processes, denoted as Cp and Cv. For monatomic gases, Cv is equal to 3/2R and Cp is equal to 5/2R. The ratio of the two specific heats, γ, is equal to Cp/Cv and is used to describe the relationship between pressure and volume for ideal gases in adiabatic processes. Experimental values of specific heats generally agree with theoretical values for monatomic gases but disagree for more complex molecules.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
29 views9 pages

Molar Specific Heat: T Is The Same For E

This document discusses molar specific heats for gases. It defines specific heats for constant pressure and constant volume processes, denoted as Cp and Cv. For monatomic gases, Cv is equal to 3/2R and Cp is equal to 5/2R. The ratio of the two specific heats, γ, is equal to Cp/Cv and is used to describe the relationship between pressure and volume for ideal gases in adiabatic processes. Experimental values of specific heats generally agree with theoretical values for monatomic gases but disagree for more complex molecules.
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Molar Specific Heat

Several processes can


change the temperature
of an ideal gas
Since T is the same for
each process, E
int
is
also the same
The heat is different for
the different paths
The heat associated with
a particular change in
temperature is not
unique
Molar Specific Heat
We define specific heats for two processes
that frequently occur:
Changes with constant pressure
Changes with constant volume
Using the number of moles, n, we can
define molar specific heats for these
processes
Molar Specific Heat
Molar specific heats:
Q = nC
V
T for constant-volume processes
Q = nC
P
T for constant-pressure processes
Q (constant pressure) must account for
both the increase in internal energy and
the transfer of energy out of the system
by work
Q
constant P
> Q
constant V
for given values of n
and T
Ideal Monatomic Gas
A monatomic gas contains one atom per
molecule
When energy is added to a monatomic
gas in a container with a fixed volume, all
of the energy goes into increasing the
translational kinetic energy of the gas
There is no other way to store energy in
such a gas
Ideal Monatomic Gas
Therefore, E
int
= 3/2 nRT
E is a function of T only
In general, the internal energy of an
ideal gas is a function of T only
The exact relationship depends on the type
of gas
At constant volume, Q = E
int
= nC
V
T
This applies to all ideal gases, not just
monatomic ones
Monatomic Gases
Solving for C
V
gives C
V
= 3/2 R = 12.5 J/mol
.
K
For all monatomic gases
This is in good agreement with experimental results for
monatomic gases
In a constant-pressure process, E
int
= Q - W and
C
P
C
V
= R
This also applies to any ideal gas
C
P
= 5/2 R = 20.8 J/mol
.
K
Ratio of Molar Specific Heats
We can also define
Theoretical values of C
V
, C
P
, and are in
excellent agreement for monatomic gases
But they are in serious disagreement with the
values for more complex molecules
Not surprising since the analysis was for monatomic
gases
Adiabatic Processes for an Ideal Gas
Assume an ideal gas is in an equilibrium state
and so PV = nRT is valid
The pressure and volume of an ideal gas at any
time during an adiabatic process are related by
PV

= constant
= C
P
/ C
V
is assumed to be constant during the
process
All three variables in the ideal gas law (P, V, T )
can change during an adiabatic process
Values of Molar Specific Heats

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