Boyles Law Graphs: PV vs Pressure Explained

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The discussion centers on the relationship between the product of pressure and volume (PV) and pressure itself, particularly in the context of ideal gases. It is established that for an ideal gas, the product PV remains constant, leading to a horizontal line when plotted against pressure. The conversation also explores plotting volume against the inverse of pressure (1/P), which results in a straight line graph, represented by the equation V = k/P, where k is a constant. The slope of this line is related to the constant k, which is proportional to temperature but does not directly represent it. The Ideal Gas Law (PV = nRT) is referenced, clarifying that R is the universal gas constant and T is the temperature of the gas, reinforcing the relationship between these variables in gas behavior.
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Hi, what would be the relationship between the product of pressure and volume (pv), against pressure. How would you represent it on a graph?, I have heard that the shape will be a horizontal line. Could someone please show an example or explain it to me?
 
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See, for example, this website at NASA. You should feel free to plot the product of pressure and volume against pressure given their demonstration for yourself. You could also plot the product against volume for completeness's sake.
 
Thanks, with the graph volume vs 1/pressure, I should just take the pressure and invert it and then sketch the graph eg. pressure 150kpa = 1/150 = 0.007. Is their any other calculations?
 
TheRedDevil18 said:
Hi, what would be the relationship between the product of pressure and volume (pv), against pressure. How would you represent it on a graph?, I have heard that the shape will be a horizontal line. Could someone please show an example or explain it to me?

The product PV for an ideal gas is constant, assuming no excess moles were added. So if you plot it against the pressure or the volume, it gives you a horizontal straight line.

Thanks, with the graph volume vs 1/pressure, I should just take the pressure and invert it and then sketch the graph eg. pressure 150kpa = 1/150 = 0.007. Is their any other calculations?

Yes, just calculate the corresponding 1/P for V. The graph is of the equation,

V = \frac{k}{P}

PV = k

From mathematics, this comes out to be a rectangular hyperbola.
 
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So in my example pressure = 150 kPa and Constant = 1530, it will become 1530/150 = 10.2 which is my volume, so its like plotting volume against volume, so my graph is a straight line?, Are you sure this is correct? and also what does the gradient represent, is it temperature?
 
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TheRedDevil18 said:
So in my example pressure = 150 kPa and Constant = 1530, it will become 1530/150 = 10.2 which is my volume, so its like plotting volume against volume, so my graph is a straight line?, Are you sure this is correct? and also what does the gradient represent, is it temperature?

Whoops. You do calculate the 1/P, for V and plot the graph. I misinterpreted your previous post and told you the hyperbolic relation for P and V, and not 1/P and V..

The graph between 1/P and V would simply be a straight line, as it is of the form y=mx ( or V=k/P). This line passes through the origin and has the slope k.
 
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So to get 1/P, it would be V=k/P, right?, and does the gradient represent temperature?
 
TheRedDevil18 said:
So to get 1/P, it would be V=k/P, right?, and does the gradient represent temperature?

Yep. The gradient does not represent temperature, though. Since gas is ideal and assuming one mol,

k = PV = RT

So, k is proportional to temperature, though not exactly equal to temperature.
 
So k = RT, what does RT represent?
 
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TheRedDevil18 said:
So k = RT, what does RT represent?

Do you know the Ideal gas equation?

R is the universal gas constant, and T is temperature of the gas.
 
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