On a PV diagram, suppose we place volume on the y axis; is the slope negative or positive?

1 Answer
Jul 21, 2017

Negative... and nonconstant.


Well, you can start from Boyle's law:

P_1V_1 = P_2V_2

at constant temperature and mols of gas. Hence,

V_2 = P_1/P_2 V_1

If P_2 > P_1, then we see that the volume decreases from left to right, as it should. That clearly eliminates c and d.

The slope would be given by:

"slope" = (DeltaV)/(DeltaP) -= (V_2 - V_1)/(P_2 - P_1)

Now we just need to show that this slope is NOT a constant. Try subtracting P_1V_2 from Boyle's law:

P_1V_1 - P_1V_2 = P_2V_2 - P_1V_2

=> P_1(V_1 - V_2) = V_2(P_2 - P_1)

=> -P_1DeltaV = V_2DeltaP

=> color(blue)(barul(|stackrel(" ")(" "(DeltaV)/(DeltaP) = -V_2/P_1" ")|))

The slope is negative, which makes sense. If pressure increases at constant temperature and mols of gas, the volume should compress.

Since P_1 does not ever change, but V_2 will decrease as P_2 increases, we can see that the slope becomes less and less negative, and is surely NOT constant. In fact, it starts at a high negative and becomes a small negative, not unlike a 1//x curve in quadrant I.

Clearly, it means the slope decreases over time and is negative.