What energy is this? Related to monoatomic ideal gas

In summary, the conversation discusses the internal energy of a monoatomic ideal gas and the relationship between its state equations. The fundamental equation is derived and it is shown that U(S,V,n) is equivalent to U(T) when extra information is provided about the gas, such as whether it is ideal or non-ideal. However, for non-ideal gases, U is not solely a function of temperature and depends on both temperature and volume.
  • #1
fluidistic
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For a monoatomic ideal gas, if ##c_v## is constant then the internal energy is worth ##U=\frac{3nRT}{2}##. This is a state equation.
From the fundamental equation ##S(U,V,n)= \frac {nS_0}{n_0}+nR \ln \left [ \left ( \frac {U}{U_0} \right ) ^{3/2} \left ( \frac{V}{V_0} \right ) \left ( \frac {n}{n_0} \right ) ^{-5/2} \right ]##, one could get ##U(S,V,n)## which would also be a fundamental equation.
But ##U(S,V,n)## is not equal to ##U(T)=\frac{3nRT}{2}##. In other words, U(S,V,n) is not the internal energy of the gas. Then what is it? The total energy? I thought that the total energy of the gas was the internal energy... I'm confused.
 
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  • #2
fluidistic said:
For a monoatomic ideal gas, if ##c_v## is constant then the internal energy is worth ##U=\frac{3nRT}{2}##. This is a state equation.
From the fundamental equation ##S(U,V,n)= \frac {nS_0}{n_0}+nR \ln \left [ \left ( \frac {U}{U_0} \right ) ^{3/2} \left ( \frac{V}{V_0} \right ) \left ( \frac {n}{n_0} \right ) ^{-5/2} \right ]##, one could get ##U(S,V,n)## which would also be a fundamental equation.
But ##U(S,V,n)## is not equal to ##U(T)=\frac{3nRT}{2}##. In other words, U(S,V,n) is not the internal energy of the gas. Then what is it? The total energy? I thought that the total energy of the gas was the internal energy... I'm confused.
The equations are equivalent. In differential form:

dU = nCvdT = TdS - PdV + μΔN

Assuming N does not change, and dividing by T:

nCvdT/T = dS - PdV/T = dS - nRdV/V

Integrating from T0 to T:

ΔS = nCvln(T/T0) + nRln(V/V0) = nRln(T/T0)3/2 + nRln(V/V0)

Without the change in n, that is just: ##S(U,V,n)= nR \ln \left [ \left ( \frac {U}{U_0} \right ) ^{3/2} \left ( \frac{V}{V_0} \right ) \right ]## which is what you started with.

AM
 
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  • #3
Andrew Mason said:
The equations are equivalent. In differential form:

dU = nCvdT = TdS - PdV + μΔN

Assuming N does not change, and dividing by T:

nCvdT/T = dS - PdV/T = dS - nRdV/V

Integrating from T0 to T:

ΔS = nCvln(T/T0) + nRln(V/V0) = nRln(T/T0)3/2 + nRln(V/V0)

Without the change in n, that is just: ##S(U,V,n)= nR \ln \left [ \left ( \frac {U}{U_0} \right ) ^{3/2} \left ( \frac{V}{V_0} \right ) \right ]## which is what you started with.

AM
I see yes, but you had to use the other state equation "PV=nRT" to replace P by nRT/V when you integrate with respect to T.
In other words you had to use some extra information to reach the fundamental equation. Because a single state equation is not enough to reach the fundamental equation (you need at least 2, though you could use 3, the other one being the one with mu), they should not be equivalent.
From the fundamental equation you can get any of the 3 state equations without any extra information. But you can't reach the fundamental equation with any of the 3 state equation alone. In that sense the fundamental equation is not equivalent to a single state equation but to at least a set of 2 of them.
So this would mean that U(S,V,n) has more information than U(T). I'm not sure what energy then is U(S,V,n)...
 
  • #4
fluidistic said:
I see yes, but you had to use the other state equation "PV=nRT" to replace P by nRT/V when you integrate with respect to T.

In other words you had to use some extra information to reach the fundamental equation. Because a single state equation is not enough to reach the fundamental equation (you need at least 2, though you could use 3, the other one being the one with mu), they should not be equivalent.
From the fundamental equation you can get any of the 3 state equations without any extra information. But you can't reach the fundamental equation with any of the 3 state equation alone. In that sense the fundamental equation is not equivalent to a single state equation but to at least a set of 2 of them.
So this would mean that U(S,V,n) has more information than U(T).
You just need to know that that U/U0 = T/T0, which is true only because it is an ideal gas.

dU = nCvdT is true only for an ideal gas. But dU = TdS-PdV is true for any gas.

I'm not sure what energy then is U(S,V,n)...
It is the internal energy of the gas. It is the total kinetic and potential energies of all the gas molecules.

AM
 
  • #5
Andrew Mason said:
You just need to know that that U/U0 = T/T0, which is true only because it is an ideal gas.

dU = nCvdT is true only for an ideal gas. But dU = TdS-PdV is true for any gas.

It is the internal energy of the gas. It is the total kinetic and potential energies of all the gas molecules.

AM

Ok I think I'm finally understanding it...
If the gas was a Van der Waals gas then I would still get that U(S,V,n) is the internal energy, which would correspond to kinetic+potential energies.
All in all, despite U(T) contains less information than U(S,V,n), if one completes the information according to the system one has (i.e. give the information that the gas is ideal or Van der Waals for instance) then one get that U(T) is in fact equivalent to U(S,V,n) in the sense that they represent the same energy; the total energy of the system.
Thanks for the replies.
 
  • #6
fluidistic said:
All in all, despite U(T) contains less information than U(S,V,n), if one completes the information according to the system one has (i.e. give the information that the gas is ideal or Van der Waals for instance) then one get that U(T) is in fact equivalent to U(S,V,n) in the sense that they represent the same energy; the total energy of the system.
But for non-ideal gases, such as Van der Waals gases, U is not a function of T alone. U depends on T and V.

AM
 
  • #7
Andrew Mason said:
But for non-ideal gases, such as Van der Waals gases, U is not a function of T alone. U depends on T and V.

AM

Oh right. In that case U(T,V,n) would be equivalent to U(S,V,n) if I use "an extra" state equation that tells me it's a Van der Waals gas (like the one that relates P to V).
The expression "U(T,V,n)" makes me think of the Helmholtz free energy.
 

1. What is energy?

Energy is the ability to do work or exert force on an object.

2. What is a monoatomic ideal gas?

A monoatomic ideal gas is a theoretical gas composed of single atoms that do not interact with each other and obey the ideal gas law.

3. How is energy related to a monoatomic ideal gas?

In a monoatomic ideal gas, the energy is directly proportional to the temperature and is related to the kinetic energy of the gas particles.

4. What types of energy are involved in a monoatomic ideal gas?

The energy in a monoatomic ideal gas is mainly in the form of kinetic energy, but there may also be potential energy due to interactions with external forces or gravitational fields.

5. How does the energy of a monoatomic ideal gas change with temperature?

According to the ideal gas law, the energy of a monoatomic ideal gas increases with temperature because the average kinetic energy of the gas particles increases as temperature rises.

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