Temperature increase in a fixed volume when adding mass

AI Thread Summary
In a fixed insulated volume, increasing the pressure by adding gas at a constant temperature raises the temperature, but the relationship is complex due to the unknown final temperature and number of moles. The ideal gas equation is not applicable since both temperature and moles are variable. The discussion highlights confusion about how pressure increase correlates to moles and temperature changes. The first law of thermodynamics in an open system context is suggested as a potential framework for understanding the scenario. Clarification on these thermodynamic principles is essential for solving the problem.
david316
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Hello,

I'm interested to know if that in a fixed insulated volume (e.g. 500ml), at some temperature (e.g. 293K) and pressure (e.g. 1 atmosphere), and you increase the pressure by a specific amount by pumping more gas (e.g. air at 293K) into the volume can you work out the expected increase in temperature. As far as I can tell, you can't use adiabatic compression as you are adding mass to the system. The ideal gas equation won't work because the final number of moles and temperature are unknown. Is there are way to solve this?

Thanks a lot
 
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If you add "a specific amount" of additional gas, then isn't the final number of moles known?
 
Sorry, its not worded very well. I increased the the pressure by a specific amount (e.g. 20 cmH2O) not the number of moles. I don't know how a increase in pressure translates to a number of moles as the temperature can change as well.
 
david316 said:
Sorry, its not worded very well. I increased the the pressure by a specific amount (e.g. 20 cmH2O) not the number of moles. I don't know how a increase in pressure translates to a number of moles as the temperature can change as well.
Are you familiar with the open system version of the first law of thermodynamics?

Chet
 
I am now. Thanks.
 
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