Reversible Adiabatic Process Question

kalbuskj31
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Homework Statement



An Ideal Gas at 300K has a volume of 15L and a pressure of 15 atm. Calculate the change when the system goes under a reversible adiabatic expansion to a pressure of 10 atm. Gamma = 5/3. Cv = 1.5R. q = 0(definition of adiabatic processes).

Homework Equations



dw = P DV (lowercase means squiggly d and uppercase means straight d)
P = nRT/V

The Attempt at a Solution



The answer in the book says w = 5130 J, which is the opposite of what I got for the internal energy.

First, I calculated n: n = PV/RT = 15 atm * 15 L / .08206 (L*atm / K * mole) * 300K

n = 9.14 moles

Then, I calculated Vf: Vf = [(Pf * Vi ^ (5/3)) / (Pf)] ^ 3/5

Vf = 19.13 L

dW = P DV
dw = NRT (dw = P DV so then work = NRT * Integral [DV/V]) ****This is wrong since T changes temperature between states*****

w = nRT ln(Vf/Vi)

Plugged in everything and the answer didn't turn out.
 
Last edited:
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Your method looks to be fine, so you might want to consider the units. Rather than L, convert to m^3, and instead of atm, convert to pascals.
 
Thanks for taking a look at the problem Gear300. The problem I found with my logic is that P, V, and T all are changing from state 1 to state 2 so I have to use the Internal Energy formula reversing the temperature. (i.e. Ti - Tf).
 
kalbuskj31 said:

Homework Statement



An Ideal Gas at 300K has a volume of 15L and a pressure of 15 atm. Calculate the change when the system goes under a reversible adiabatic expansion to a pressure of 10 atm. Gamma = 5/3. Cv = 1.5R. q = 0(definition of adiabatic processes).

...

(dw = P DV so then work = NRT * Integral [DV/V]) ****This is wrong since T changes temperature between states*****

w = nRT ln(Vf/Vi)

Plugged in everything and the answer didn't turn out.
Not sure what the question is. Are you trying to find the work done? Find the change in temperature and use:

W = \Delta U = nC_v\Delta T

AM
 
andrew,

That's what I ended up doing to get the answer.
 
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