Heat capacity ratio yields inconsistent results

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the heat capacity ratio (Cp/CV) and degrees of freedom (f) for a gas undergoing isochoric and isobaric heating. The expected solution yields f = 3, but alternative calculations using Joule's law lead to inconsistent results, including f = 1.09 and f = -0.04. Participants express confusion over discrepancies in results, suggesting potential flaws in the problem statement or the approach taken. Ultimately, the calculations indicate that the values of heat added (Q1 and Q2) may need adjustment for consistency with expected thermodynamic relationships. The conversation highlights the complexity of applying thermodynamic principles accurately in problem-solving scenarios.
uter
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Homework Statement


A Gas is in a Volume V0 = 1 Liter at Pressure p0 = 3 bar.
  1. Isochoric Heating using the Heat Q1 = 182 J, the pressure raises to p1 = 6.34 bar.
  2. Gas is reset to inital state. Isobaric Heating using the Heat Q2 = 546 J, the Volume increases to V2 = 3 Liter.
Calculate Cp/CV. Calculate the degrees of freedom f.

Homework Equations



pV = nRT
CV = ΔQ/ΔT (for first step)
Cp = ΔQ/ΔT (for second step)
Cp/CV = 1+ 2/f
and optionally
U = ΔQ + ΔW = f/2 n R T

The Attempt at a Solution


The task as described above is pretty straightforward and yields the expected f = 3 solution.

However, I thought about another way of solving this exercise, but it keeps on yielding different results:
If I take the last equation (Joules Law: U = f/2 n R T) together with the ideal Gas Equation for the isochoric process, I get f = 1.09. (Again straightforward inserting and solving for f.)

Those results don't match. Neither do they, if I take the isobaric process (taking into account, that work is done). Just by taking the quotient of those two, I get the expected result. Is this a flaw in the exercise or is there any mistake within my formulas?
 
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the last equation provided by you has an inherent sign convention which is where you are going wrong . hence check the feasability of the 2nd statement of the problem
 
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Well in the case of an isochoric heating the sign convention wouldn't affect the result, would it? I mean ΔW = 0 anyways.
 
Show us the details of your work for the second method, which is the method I envisioned using. This method seems very straightforward.

Chet
 
In the case of isochoric heating we have ΔW = 0 which gives us from Joule's law and the first law of TD: ΔQ = f/2 n R ΔT.
Furthermore we know from the ideal gas equation, that Δp V = n R ΔT, which we can solve for ΔT = Δp V / (R n).
We insert the latter equation into the first one and get ΔQ = f/2 Δp V, which we can solve for f = 2 ΔQ / (Δp V).
However, inserting the above values (ΔQ = 182 J, Δp = 3.34e5 Pa, V = 1e-3 Liter) results in f = 1.09.

In the case of isobaric heating, Joule's law and the first law of TD give us: ΔQ = f/2 n R ΔT + p ΔV.
Again, using the ideal gas equation with pΔV = n R ΔT gives inserted in the previous equation for ΔT:
ΔQ = (f/2 + 1) pΔV.
Solving for f and inserting the according values results in f = -0.04 (or something around that, calculated it several times yesterday).

All this left me pretty confused…
 
uter said:
In the case of isobaric heating, Joule's law and the first law of TD give us: ΔQ = f/2 n R ΔT + p ΔV.

this is where the sign convention matters .

and 1.09 looks like the correct answer
 
Alright, but why does it differ from the value I get using Cp/CV ?
 
I approached this a little differently:

Let the subscript 1 refer to the case of constant volume and the subscript 2 refer to the case of constant pressure. So, for constant volume:

##nC_v(T_1-T_0)=Q_1##

##\frac{p_0v_0}{RT_0}C_v(T_1-T_0)=Q_1##

From the ideal gas law,

##T_1=\frac{p_1}{p_0}T_0##

Combining these equations, I get:

##\frac{C_v}{R}=\frac{Q_1}{v_0(p_1-p_0)}##

By a similar procedure for the constant pressure case, I get:

##\frac{C_p}{R}=\frac{Q_2}{p_0(v_2-v_0)}##

So, from these results:

##\frac{C_p}{C_v}=\frac{Q_2}{Q_1}\frac{(\frac{p_1}{p_0}-1)}{(\frac{v_2}{v_0}-1)}##

Chet
 
Hi Chet,

thanks for your detailed explanation. That gives us exactly the expected result of 5/3 -> f = 3. But what's wrong with my "short" approach?

Thanks!

P.S.: I somehow suspect that this exercise has been created in a "reverse" way which is ambiguous… I mean going back from the Cp/Cv equation gives me one condition for all variables, whilst going back from my short approach gives two conditions…

P.P.S.: I checked this in Maple: If I fix all state variables (pi and Vi), Q1 = 501 J and Q2 must be 1500 J. So the ratio between Q1 and Q2 was perfectly fine, but my approach fixes them to absolute values…
Is this correct?
 
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Well, if I use the equations separately to evaluate the situation, I get:

##\frac{C_v}{R}=\frac{182}{(0.001)(3.34\times 10^5)}=0.54491##

##\frac{C_p}{R}=\frac{546}{(0.002)(3.\times 10^5)}=0.91##

Neither of these is consistent with ##C_v = 1.5 R## and ##C_p = 2.5 R##. So, there is something wrong with the problem statement. If ##Q_1## were 500 J, and ##Q_2 = 1500 J##, then everything would be consistent.

Chet
 
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