I shall now quote a book "Physics for Scientists and Engineers" by Douglas C. Giancoli, 4th edition (2009), page 508 (ISBN-13
: 9780131495081). The text in bold is just as at appears in the original text.
"Let us assume that the gas is enclosed in a container fitted with a movable piston, Fig. 19-7, and that the gas is in contact with a heat reservoir (a body whose mass is so large that, ideally, its temperature does not change significantly when heat is exchanged with our system). We also assume that the process of compression (volume decreases) or expansion (volume increases) is done quasistatically ("almost statically"), by which we mean extremely slowly, so that all of the gas moves between a series of equilibrium states each of which are at the same temperature. If an amount of heat Q is added to the system and temperature is to remain constant, the gas will expand and do an amount of work W on the environment (it exerts a force on the piston and moves it through a distance). The temperature and mass are kept constant, so from Eq. 19-1, the internal energy does not change: ΔEint = 2/3nRΔT=0. Hence, by the first law of thermodynamics, Eq. 19-4, ΔEint =Q-W=0, so W=Q: the work done by the gas in an isothermal process equals the heat added to the gas."
Now, Fig 19-7 is nothing but a cylindrical piston with text "ideal gas" in the container and the text "movable piston". There isn't any additional weight on the piston, but, of course, the piston has a mass of its own and therefore a weight, a
constant weight. The text clearly says that work is done on the piston to move it , so it wouldn't make sense to assume that the piston is weightless. Even if that was assumed, there would still be a constant force due to atmospheric pressure (F = P
0A
piston)! If another constant weight was added on top of the piston, that would just equal a heavier piston, right? Therefore, the weight is constant in this process, i.e. the
external pressure is constant, not the pressure of the gas (just like in the video that I posted earlier!). Changing the external pressure (due weight) is not discussed at any point (also true for the video).
Indeed, the pressure of the gas (assuming n = constant) cannot be constant in an isothermal process if the volume changes. We know this from the ideal gas law, PV = nRT. The piston should stop moving once the pressure of the gas and the external pressure are equal, P
in=P
out ⇒F
in=F
out. The internal pressure has to drop to meet the external pressure. That's why isotherms for expasions are decreasing graphs in PV-diagrams.
In an isobaric process, both the external pressure (due weight plus atmospheric pressure) and the pressure of the gas are equal from start to finish, so there is no net force on the piston. It means that the piston can either stay still or move at constant velocity (Newton I).
Could the key word to this whole thing be
quasistatic? That is to say, if the process is not done slowly enough, the process will be isobaric. If the gas is allowed to go through equilibrium states, the process will be isothermal.