Model for Sudden Decompression of Ideal Gas in Box

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The discussion revolves around modeling the sudden decompression of an ideal gas contained in an isolated box. The initial model presented is a decay equation, n(t) = N e^{-At}, where n is the number of particles remaining in the volume L^3 over time. The user seeks a more comprehensive model that incorporates absolute temperature, the box dimensions, and the Boltzmann constant. A proposed formula for the number of particles over time includes these variables, suggesting a relationship influenced by temperature and molecular weight. The user is looking for references or literature that could provide further insights into this modeling challenge.
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Imagine an infinitely long square box of side L. This box is isolated from the ambient and contains a number of N molecules of an ideal gas in a volume L^3 in thermal equilibrium located at one end of the box at time t=0.

I found that the evolution of this system can be modeled by the decay equation

n(t) = N e^{-At}.

Where n is the number of particles in the volume L^3 and A is a scalling constant.

My question is: Is there a better model for this system? (maybe hopefuly including absolute temperature T, L and Boltzman constant k_B)
 
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Please, help. I'm stuck a long time in this.

So far I got the following formula which gives the time the i-th particle takes to reach the barrier at x=L:

<br /> t_i = \frac{2 L - x_i}{\overline{v} \cos(a_i)}<br />

where

x_i is a random variable between 0 and L
a_i is a random variable between 0 and \pi /2
\overline{v} is the average speed of a gas particle

What I need is n(t) = f(N, L, \overline{v},t)

where

N is the total number of particles
n(t) is the the number of particles in the original volume L^3 after time t

Any reference book or article?

Thanks
 
Perhaps a Google search of "sudden decompression equations" with an additional search term of NASA, LANL or something similar might give some insight.
 
Thank you for you suggestion, pallidin, but I couldn't find anything.

I'm checking the consistency of the following formula I worked out:

<br /> \boxed{<br /> \;\;n(t) = N exp\left[-\left(\frac{4\ln{2}\sqrt{\frac{3k_BT}{m}}}{\pi L}\right)t\right].\;\;<br /> }<br />

where k_B is Boltzmann constant, T is the absolute temperature and m is the atomic weight of the monoatomic gas molecule.
 
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