indigojoker said:
It seems I am not familiar with this R constant. I am using Thermal Physics by Charles Kittel and they did a similar calculation without using the R term.
Interesting. I own a copy of the second edition, but I didn't use the book for a course. I'll have to look through it to see why he omits R (I suspect he does something like make a choice of units for which R = 1). But it's the 'R' in PV = nRT, so if you are giving values for W, Q, etc., in any set of standard units (SI, cgs metric, British Engineering), R needs to be there.
Also, I more or less guessed in some sense for the PV and TS graphs. I'm not sure why certain parts of the graph is curved. Is it safe to assume that a straight line in the PV graph correlates to a curved line on the TS graph? So for example, the Carnot cycle, the TS graph is a box, and this, the PV graph is made up of curved lines.
For the Carnot cycle on a T-S diagram, the processes are isothermal, thus vertical lines [constant T], or reversible adiabatic, where Q = 0 and so dS = 0 [thus constant S]. (Note: there are also irreversible adiabatic processes, in which dS is
not zero.)
For the cycle you're asked to work on, the isovolumic (also called isochoric) processes involve no work, so
dU = dQ + dW = dQ + 0 and dU = (3/2) · nR · dT , for the monatomic gas.
So the
change in entropy is found by integrating
dS = dQ / T = (3/2) · nR · ( dT / T ) ,
in which case delta-S is going to involve a logarithmic function of T. So your concave downward curves are correct.