Pressure and spring constant problem

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around a physics problem involving a cylinder with a piston, an ideal gas, and a spring. The user seeks to determine the spring constant after heating the gas, which compresses the spring. They initially calculate the new pressure using the ideal gas law but struggle with relating pressure to the spring constant. Key points include the need to use the cross-sectional area of the cylinder to find the force exerted by the gas pressure and understanding the balance of forces acting on the piston. The conversation highlights confusion over the roles of internal and external pressures in the system, emphasizing the need for clarity in applying the principles of mechanics and gas laws to solve the problem.
kellyneedshelp
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hi, i am having trouble with this problem:

A cylinder with a diameter of 5.04 cm has a movable piston attached to a horizontal spring. The cylinder contains 1.40 liters of an ideal gas at 20.9°C and 0.99 atm pressure. Under these conditions, the spring is unstretched. The temperature of the gas is increased to 95°C and it is found that the spring compresses 3.41 cm. Determine the spring constant k.

I am not sure how to relate the change in pressure with a spring constant. So far, I tried finding the new pressure using (P1*V1)/(T1) = (P2*V2)/(T2) like this:
(.99atm*1.4L)/(273.15+20.9) = (P2*1.4L)/(273.15+95)
and got P2 = 1.239atm

How can I use this to find the spring constant? I tried using the eq. P=F/A but then I didn't know the area of the cylinder to use.

Could anyone please help me understand this problem better?

Thanks!
 
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You are correct in using F = PA.You are given the diameter of the cylinder and hence you can work out the area.

~H
 
isn't the area of a cylinder = 2*pi*r*h ?
how do i find the area of the cylinder without knowing its height/length?
thanks!
 
The Force applied by Pressure is perpendicular to the Area.
That is, the Pressure Force is the Normal Force from long ago...
... in F = P.A , the Force pierces (acts *through*) the Area,
so you want to use the "cross-sectional" Area, perp. to the motion
(not the area of the *side* of the cylinder).
 
do you mean use the area of one end of the cylinder, like just pi*r^2?
 
Yes.
A Force perp to that end Area would push the cylinder, correct?
A Force perp to the sides would just try to enlarge the chamber diameter
 
ok, well i tried using A=pi*(.0252m)^2 = .001995 m^2
and P = 1.239atm
to get F = (1.239)*(.001995) = .0007868 N
and then use F=-kx
where x=0.0341m
to get k=.07249 N/m
but this is not the right answer.

am i not following what you are saying correctly?

thanks=)
 
Apparently, there's 0.99 atm of Pressure on the OUTside of the piston
(because F_spring = 0 when INside Pressure = 0.99 atm).
One presses leftward, one presses rightward ...
 
Hi, I'm trying to figure out the same problem.

What does it mean for there to be .99 atm pressure outside vs. inside, in terms of solving a problem? Conceptually, is it that the pressure outside is pushing against the top of the cylinder, but the pressure inside is greater than the outside, thus pushing outward and compressing the spring?

So would that mean Fspring\rmfamily + Foutside pressure\rmfamily = Finside pressure\rmfamily? So, -kX + P1A = P2A?
 
  • #10
yes some help on this would be nice...
using the ideal gas law, since nr=constant=PiVi/Ti=PfVf/Tf, thus
PfVf=a constant

F=PA
Fspring=kx

then -kx-P(outside)A=P(inside)A
where A=pi(r^2)

but now I am stuck...I understand that initially P(outside)A=P(inside)A and thus kx=F(spring)=0 but I am not sure how to go from here
thanks
 
  • #11
how do you solve for the final pressure & and the final volume? and is what I posted above correct? or is there some flaw I'm missing
again, thank you
 
  • #12
is this problem/ piston isochoric or isobaric?
 
  • #13
i did what kelly did and also got the wrong answer...I do not know how to apply the thing about the outside pressure

please help
thanks
 
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