What Happens to Gas in Free Expansion?

  • Thread starter yashar_g
  • Start date
  • Tags
    Gas
In summary, an expanding gas would retain it's temperature due to lack of outside forces to remove heat.
  • #1
yashar_g
4
0
what would happen to gas in...

Hi there,
I'm working on some experiments regarding to gases. I want to know what'd happen to gas which is uneder high temprature and high pressure when it enteres into vacuum.

it would be very kind of you to answer me in detail.
Many thanks, Yashar.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
First thing that springs to mind is adiabatic expansion (comparable to what happens in a fire extinguisher)... not entirely sure though.
 
  • #3
what would happen to gas in...

Hi there,
I'm working on some experiments regarding to gases. I want to know what'd happen to gas which is uneder high temprature and high pressure when it enteres into space.
is it loose temp.? (adiabatic?)
it would be very kind of you to answer me in detail.
 
  • #4
(Please don't multi-post the same thing.)

If it's a real gas, it will naturally expand and cool down in the process. If it does not radiate heat, the process should be adiabatic. You have to find the adiabatic law for real gases. Van der Waals' eqn of state may be a good approximation.
 
  • #5
As I read your question and the reply I thought of something very interesting. If the hot gas is released into space, we would naturally think that the gas should cool down. However, heat is proportional to the kinetic energy of the gas molecules and since there is no surrounding particles to which the gas molecules can loose their kinetic energy, I would think that it would retain it's temperature. Afterall the only way in which anything can loose heat is by either giving it's kinetic energy to surrounding particles or emmiting it through electromagnetic waves. I don't believe that the gas would start emmiting waves as it is released into space, would it?
 
  • #6
Pressure and temperature are inversely proportional. In vacuum pressure roughly = 0. Gases expand to occupy space. You can work out the rest...

Edit: I think what I wrote is bollocks (haven't slept for about 48 hours). So here's a gas law to cover my arse.

Pressure * volume = number of molecules * gas constant * temperature.
 
Last edited:
  • #7
Nerd said:
As I read your question and the reply I thought of something very interesting. If the hot gas is released into space, we would naturally think that the gas should cool down. However, heat is proportional to the kinetic energy of the gas molecules and since there is no surrounding particles to which the gas molecules can loose their kinetic energy, I would think that it would retain it's temperature. Afterall the only way in which anything can loose heat is by either giving it's kinetic energy to surrounding particles or emmiting it through electromagnetic waves. I don't believe that the gas would start emmiting waves as it is released into space, would it?

For an ideal gas in isolation, your argument is quite correct. However, there are various intermolecular forces in a real gas, which are feeble but attractive when the distances between molecules become large. In order to overcome these forces while expanding, the molecules have to lose a part of their KE, and the gas cools down in the process.

About the loss by EM radiation, that is also bound to happen. If two molecules collide, an electron may be pushed to a higher energy state, and it'll come to the ground state subsequently by emitting a photon.

The a/V^2 term in van der Waals’ eqn of state represents the attractive force, which reduces the observed pressure of a real gas, as compared to an ideal gas.

An ideal gas would not cool down while expanding in space, but any real gas would.

dst said:
Edit: I think what I wrote is bollocks (haven't slept for about 48 hours). So here's a gas law to cover my arse.

Pressure * volume = number of molecules * gas constant * temperature.

Pardon, your **** is still showing...it's not number of molecules, but number of moles.
 
  • #8
That isn't correct, Shooting Star (though the reasoning for what actually happens is correct). An ideal gas undergoing adiabatic expansion cools down, as the ideal gas equations predict: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ideal_gas_law
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ideal_gas_law
Adiabatic cooling occurs when the pressure of a substance is decreased as it does work on its surroundings...

Such temperature changes can be quantified using the ideal gas law...
 
  • #9
russ_watters said:
That isn't correct, Shooting Star (though the reasoning for what actually happens is correct). An ideal gas undergoing adiabatic expansion cools down, as the ideal gas equations predict: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ideal_gas_law

Russ,

An ideal gas expanding in space has no reason to cool down. It does not have any intermolecular force to overcome, nor any work to do by pressing on any outside wall. The average KE per molecule stays constant, since there is no way it can lose heat. (I am, of course, not considering heat loss by radiation, which will happen in a real gas.)

Perhaps I made a mistake by writing the phrase "gas in isolation". I was replyiing to Nerd's comment: "If the hot gas is released into space, we would naturally think that the gas should cool down."

Some further clarification from
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adiabatic_free_expansion:

Adiabatic free expansion is an irreversible process in which a gas expands without constraint, and during which no heat is exchanged. An example of the process is the release of a gas into a vacuum.

Real gases experience a temperature change (see Joule-Thomson effect) during free expansion. For an ideal gas, the temperature doesn't change, and the conditions before and after adiabatic free expansion satisfy piVi = pfVf, where p is the pressure, V is the volume, and i and f refer to the initial and final states.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #10
I stand corrected. I didn't think that the "without constraint" part was critical, but I guess it is. If you expand a gas through a nozzle in the atmosphere, the atmosphere will absorb some of the energy of the expansion. In free expansion, the gas will literally expand forever. I'm still not 100% clear on this, though, since the page on the ideal gas law includes adiabatic (but not necessarily free) expansion and a temperature change calculation. I guess with free expansion, though, the volume goes to infinity and the pressure to zero.
 

1. What would happen to gas in a vacuum?

If a gas is placed in a vacuum, it will expand and fill the entire space. This is because there is no external pressure to contain the gas molecules.

2. What would happen to gas in a closed container?

In a closed container, the gas molecules will continue to move around and collide with each other, creating pressure on the walls of the container. The volume of gas will also remain constant, as it is contained within the container.

3. What would happen to gas when heated?

When gas is heated, its molecules gain energy and move faster, causing an increase in pressure and volume. If the temperature is high enough, the gas may even change into a liquid or solid state.

4. What would happen to gas when cooled?

When gas is cooled, its molecules lose energy and move slower, resulting in a decrease in pressure and volume. If the temperature is low enough, the gas may condense into a liquid or solid state.

5. What would happen to gas in a chemical reaction?

In a chemical reaction, the properties of gas can change, such as its volume, pressure, and temperature. The gas may also combine with other elements to form new compounds or release energy in the form of heat or light.

Similar threads

  • Classical Physics
Replies
2
Views
852
  • Classical Physics
Replies
2
Views
601
  • Classical Physics
Replies
3
Views
994
  • Classical Physics
Replies
1
Views
488
  • Introductory Physics Homework Help
Replies
1
Views
475
Replies
11
Views
922
Replies
69
Views
4K
  • Materials and Chemical Engineering
Replies
2
Views
268
  • Classical Physics
Replies
7
Views
1K
Replies
5
Views
559
Back
Top