Hi rbj & rdx,
rbj wrote: does the energy density of a something (a fluid, perhaps, what else can we be talking about regarding pressure and energy density?) have anything to do with the pressure of the something?
i think, for the case that the something is an ideal gas, the answer is "yes".
I'd agree 100% that there can be an equation just as you've found, that might somehow give energy per unit volume as a function of pressure in the thermodynamic sense.
\frac{U}{V} \frac{\hat{R}}{C_v} = P
Of course, the question as it relates to thermodynamics is exactly as you've concluded, "…otherwize the dimensional consistency might just be coincidental."
I guess I can agree with you on all those things.
~
Let's consider this. Let's take for example, 3 different processes:
- Adiabatic and reversible change in pressure from P1 to P2. (ie: isentropic process)
- Adiabatic and isenthalpic change in pressure from P1 to P2. (isenthalpic process)
- Isochoric process which results in a change in pressure from P1 to P2.
Each process is the same in that they all change in pressure the exact same amount. But they are different in respect to the energy gained or lost by the fluid. So how does "energy density" as a function of pressure address these various processes? Is there an important relationship?
I guess I objected to the original question because there is no single relationship between thermodynamic energy and pressure energy because they are related only by what process the fluid undergoes.
Regardless, there is actually a relationship, but it isn't a thermodynamic relationship (ie: a relationship governed by the laws of thermodynamics). It has nothing to do with any of the processes I listed above. Bernoulli's equation uses pressure as one of the energy terms along side kinetic and potential energy. But of course, the process by which a change in fluid pressure which meets the criteria for Bernoulli's equation isn't thermodynamic, it's strictly mechanical, and unless you maintain all the assumptions used by the Bernoulli equation (ie: incompressible fluid, no work done, along a streamline, etc…) there won't be any relationship to any process unless one defines the assumptions and presents a specific relationship between energy and pressure that is valid for only those assumptions just like the Bernoulli equation does.
See also this link in http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/press.html" under "Pressure as Energy Density" half way down the page.