How to find the volume ratio of two tanks

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To find the volume ratio of two tanks, one method involves using the isothermal process equation V1/V2 = P2/P1, where pressures are measured after allowing air to flow between the tanks. The larger tank's pressure drops from 130 kPa to 121 kPa, while the smaller tank's pressure rises from 0 to 119 kPa, indicating a pressure equilibrium. The discussion suggests exploring the Burnett expansion method as an alternative approach, although resources on this topic are limited. Participants express difficulty accessing relevant information due to paywalls. Overall, the conversation centers on finding a second method to measure the volume ratio effectively.
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Homework Statement


I have a problem:
So one tank is pressurised and then a pipe connecting this tank to a smaller one is opened so air can flow into the smaller tank. You then wait for the pressure to settle and read some pressure for each cylinder values.

I need to find two ways to measure the volume ratio of the larger tank to the smaller one. I think I've got one but not another

Homework Equations

The Attempt at a Solution


I think you can consider it an isothermal process as the gas temp stays constant and this results in the equation to get V1/V2 = P2/P1. But I'm really stuck on how to find another way to do it.

Could anyone offer me a hand?

Thanks so much!
 
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Maybe an adiabatic process?

Can you post the exact problem statement please?
 
Really that was about it, we pressurised the first container to about 130 kPA and then allowed the two pressures in both containers to settle. The pressure in the big tank dropped to about 121 kPa and the smaller one increased to about 119 kPa. Also the temperature stayed constant so I don't think it could be adiabatic. Sorry if this isn't clear but that is really all that we did and all the data we where told to collect.
 
See "Burnett expansion."
 
Bystander said:
See "Burnett expansion."

I googled Burnett expansion but there isn't really anything on it, I keep on getting stuck at pay walls!
 
Wow! I see what you mean. Did find one --- "Properties of Water and Steam: Proceedings of the 11th International ..." that shows enough text to tell you what the Burnett method is about.
 
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