Calculate the work (Thermodynamics)

AI Thread Summary
An ideal gas expands isobarically from a volume of 3 m³ to 9 m³ and then undergoes isothermal compression back to 3 m³, followed by cooling to its initial pressure. The work done during the isobaric expansion is calculated using the formula W = -p(V2 - V1), while the isothermal compression requires careful consideration of the logarithmic relationship between volumes. The user initially miscalculated the logarithmic term in the isothermal work equation, leading to confusion about the total work done. After clarifying the steps and correcting the logarithmic values, the user arrived at the correct total work of 780 kJ. The discussion emphasizes the importance of analyzing each thermodynamic step separately to accurately calculate work done.
alivedude
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Homework Statement



An ideal gas with pressure ##p_1=2## bar and volume ##V_1=3 \, m^3## is expanding under constant pressure to the volume ##V_2=3V_1##. Then we compress the gas isothermally back to ##V_1##. Finally the gas cools down to initial pressure ##p_1##. Calculate the total amount of work.

Homework Equations



Work done is given by ##W=-\int_{V_1}^{V_2}pdV##

The Attempt at a Solution


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The first work is isobar so we have that
##W_1 = -p(V_2-V_1)##

For the last part we have that ##dV=0## so work done there is 0.

What about the second part? Work done for an isothermal compression is ##W=-vRT\ln\frac{V_2}{V_1}## but I have no information about the temperatur or number of mols. Can anyone guide me in the right direction?

The answer is ##780## kJ but I can't get there.
 
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Hi,

alivedude said:
##W=-vRT\ln\frac{V_2}{V_1}##

There is a mistake in this equation, this could be the problem.
 
What is the mistake? I use the ideal gas law ##pV=vRT##

##W=-vRT\int_{V_1}^{v_2} \frac{dV}{V} = -vRT \ln \frac{V_2}{V_1}##
 
alivedude said:
##pV=vRT##

Maybe there is a misunderstanding in used letters: What dimension/value does ##v## have in your formula?
 
stockzahn said:
Maybe there is a misunderstanding in used letters: What dimension/value does ##v## have in your formula?

Oh I'm sorry! It's in mol
 
OK, sorry too, I'm used to a different nomenclature. In your formulas

##pV=vRT## & ##W=-vRT\ln\frac{V_2}{V_1}##

you already have the solution. Just combine them. Hint: How does the product ##p⋅V## behave during an isothermal change of state?
 
stockzahn said:
OK, sorry too, I'm used to a different nomenclature. In your formulas

##pV=vRT## & ##W=-vRT\ln\frac{V_2}{V_1}##

you already have the solution. Just combine them. Hint: How does the product ##p⋅V## behave during an isothermal change of state?
Im feeling bit slow here but i just can't see where i go wrong. I plug in ##pV## instead of ##vRT## and add the works

##W_{tot} = -p_1(V_2-V_1) - p_1V_2\ln \frac{V_2}{V_1} ##

clearly this is wrong?
 
In your first post you already figured out, that for step (3) ΔW=0:

alivedude said:
For the last part we have that ##dV=0## so work done there is 0.

To be able to reach the initial state again, there must be one step where the energy difference of the gas is positive and one step where it is negative. Your equation treats both steps like energy losses (work done by the gas).

alivedude said:
Im feeling bit slow here but i just can't see where i go wrong. I plug in ##pV## instead of ##vRT## and add the works

##W_{tot} = -p_1(V_2-V_1) - p_1V_2\ln \frac{V_2}{V_1} ##

clearly this is wrong?
 
Last edited:
stockzahn said:
In your first post you already figured out, that for step (3) ΔW=0:
To be able to reach the initial state again, there must be one step where the energy difference of the gas is positive and one step where it is negative. Your equation treats both steps like energy losses.
To be honest, I have no idea what to do at this moment. The book i have is written by my professor and there is ZERO examples, just theory through the whole thing and I'm getting so frustrated. I have no idea what to do and I can't figure it out either.

This is what I'm thinking:

Since we reach the initial point the change in energy overall is zero. That means that the energy we add to the system by work is exactly the same as the amount of energy that we take away in form of heat when we cool the gas in step 3. During the cooling no work is done, so the only work comes from step 1 and 2. Then why isn't my calculation right here above?
 
  • #10
alivedude said:
Since we reach the initial point the change in energy overall is zero.

Correct

alivedude said:
That means that the energy we add to the system by work is exactly the same as the amount of energy that we take away in form of heat when we cool the gas in step 3.

Not necessarily. You have to analyse each step seperatly to find out, during which step work is done by the gas (ΔW < 0) and during which step work is put into the gas (ΔW > 0). Have a look at the volume of the gas: Depending on its change, whether it is increasing or decreasing, work is done by the gas or put into the gas.
 
  • #11
stockzahn said:
Correct
Not necessarily. You have to analyse each step seperatly to find out, during which step work is done by the gas (ΔW < 0) and during which step work is put into the gas (ΔW > 0). Have a look at the volume of the gas: Depending on its change, whether it is increasing or decreasing, work is done by the gas or put into the gas.

Found out what the problem was and now i have the right answer.

My calculation for the work above was correct but I used ##ln\frac{9}{3}## instead of ##ln\frac{3}{9}##. I wasn't paying attention that i was suppose to go back to ##3 m^3## again.

Anyway, thanks for all the patience you had with me!
 
  • #12
You're welcome, I hope I could help.
 
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