Thermodynamics isue not homework but debate

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Discussion Overview

The discussion centers around the behavior of a balloon exposed to sunlight, particularly focusing on the causes of its potential failure or explosion. Participants explore the roles of pressure, volume, and temperature in this context, engaging in a debate rather than seeking a definitive answer.

Discussion Character

  • Debate/contested
  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation

Main Points Raised

  • One participant argues that a balloon will explode due to volume increase when heated, while the teacher claims it will explode due to pressure increase.
  • Another participant suggests that the failure of the balloon is fundamentally linked to the breaking of atomic bonds in the material rather than solely to pressure or volume changes.
  • A participant notes that a rubber balloon filled with air may leak, which could affect its behavior under heat, and mentions that the sun may degrade the rubber over time, potentially leading to failure.
  • Concerns are raised about the varying rates of air leakage through rubber, with one participant questioning the quantities involved.
  • Discussion includes the idea that the balloon's material properties and the external conditions (like pressure differences) play significant roles in its failure.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on whether pressure or volume is the primary cause of the balloon's failure, with no consensus reached. Some agree that both factors are interlinked, while others emphasize different mechanisms of failure.

Contextual Notes

Participants discuss hypothetical scenarios to isolate variables affecting the balloon's behavior, but these scenarios remain theoretical and do not resolve the underlying debate about the causes of failure.

Who May Find This Useful

This discussion may be of interest to those studying thermodynamics, material science, or anyone curious about the physical properties of gases and their interactions with materials under varying conditions.

billowo
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Thermodynamics isue... not homework but debate...

Hi, i have visited the forum for an explanation in cuantum theories (curious) and now i need other help.

In my school (in Chile, we speak spanish, forgive my english, please), my teacher gave a test, I am really good at physics but this time i got wrong an answer that i think that is wrigh, post your opinions and give VALID answers, not just a yes, maybe mathematical answers would be better.

the problem is this If you leave a balloon exposed to the sun, ¿what will happen?
(Really easy so far, right)
-My teacher says that it will explote (¡¡¡ NO WAY¡¡¡, really??') because of the presure increase.
-I say it will explote because of the volume increase.

This are my argumens
-When you say something (in cience) you have to make an hipothesis, to make a theory you have to reduce (or eliminate) any other variable or noise (Right).
So far so good...
so i started to think, the sun heats the balloon, that makes presure increase that makes volume increase that makes the balloon explote... so the presure is linked to the volume (in the balloon) .
-To eliminate all variables i simulated 3 experiments
1--Volume variable (all constants)
2--Presure variable (all constants)
3--Temperature variable (all constants)


In 1--Volume variable i give the next "hipothetical" scenario:
-In order to preserve presure and temperature constant i will decrease the "outside balloon" presure, so the presure differences will make the balloon expand without changing inside presure (At least in very little) nor temperature... (in theory) what I am doing is to expand the balloon, Will it explode at some point??...YES.

In 2--Presure variable i give the next "hipothetical" scenario:
-In order to preserve volume and temperature constant i will increase the "outside balloon" presure, and at the same time increase the "inside balloon" presure (either with magic or adding more gas) so the presure differences is 0 that will make the balloon to increase (inside) presure without changing volume nor temperature... (in theory) Will it explode at some point??...NO... because the presure inside and outside will eliminate each other (First law of Newton).


In 3--Temperature variable i give the next "hipothetical" scenario:
-Honestly, i tried to think this one, and i just couldn't figure it out...

SO what do you think??, my teacher is right or i am right, because if you thing about it, in all cases, volume is what makes a balloon explode, right??

PS: A tie is also allowed, that means say that neither the presure nor the volume is what cause the balloon to explote, that means saying that BOTH are linked so both answers are right.
 
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Fundamentally, the balloon fails because it takes less energy to break the atomic bonds of its constituent material than it does to stretch them any farther.

I agree with you. The balloon would not fail if the pressure were increased at constant volume and temperature (for example, by enclosing the balloon or by increasing external pressure too, as you pointed out). But it would fail if the volume were increased at constant pressure and temperature (for example, by manually stretching the material). It would also fail if the temperature were increased at constant pressure and volume (for example, by heating an open balloon). In the temperature case, the balloon would fail because the solid plastic would start to flow.

So in my opinion it seems more reasonable to say that a balloon fails by volume increase than by pressure increase. But these are coupled in the closed-balloon-in-the-sun scenario, so it seems like a minor issue. I think it is much more useful to describe the failure mechanism, the fundamental idea of atomic bonds breaking, than to argue about the cause.
 
A rubber balloon filled with AIR will leak, because air can pass through the rubber. Perhaps the leakage rate compensates for thermal expansion from heat from the sun (PV = nRT). Over time, the sun degrades the elasticity and quality of the rubber, possibly causing failure.

If the balloon is filled with gas lighter than air rises indefinitely: external pressure decreases towards a vacuum. An increasing difference between internal and external pressure adds stress to the balloon's rubber, possibly causing failure.
 
pzlded said:
A rubber balloon filled with AIR will leak, because air can pass through the rubber.

first time i am hearing that. IF it does leak, in what quantities does air leak through rubber?
 
Balloon wall thickness and material are not standardized, thus vary greatly. Mylar balloons usually have less air leakage than rubber, but are usually more expensive.

The greater the difference between inside and outside pressure, the greater the leakage rate. A freshly filled helium filled rubber balloon could leak one fourth of its gas overnight.
 

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