An ideal gas is compressed at a constant pressure of 120 kPa to one-half of its initial volume. The work done on the gas is 790 J. What was the initial volume of the gas?

1 Answer
Feb 18, 2016

V_1 = "13.2 L"V1=13.2 L
V_2 = "6.6 L"V2=6.6 L


This is asking you about the definition of work.

\mathbf(w = -PDeltaV

(DeltaV = V_2 - V_1.)

  • You have a constant pressure, P = "120 kPa".
  • You also know from the question that V_2 = 1/2V_1.
  • You know that w = "790 J". It is numerically positive because you are compressing the gas, i.e. doing work on the gas.

Therefore, you have everything you need to substitute and solve.

-w/P = V_2 - V_1 = 1/2V_1 - V_1

w/P = V_1 - 1/2V_1 = 1/2V_1

But since we're solving for V_1 anyways...

color(green)(V_1) = (2w)/P

= (2("790 J"))/("120 kPa") = color(green)(("1580 J")/("120 kPa"))

Almost there, but wait a minute. So we have energy divided by pressure. We need volume. Let's just say that you don't know that "1 J" = "1 L"cdot"kPa".

Consider the universal gas constant R:

R = "8.314472 J/mol"cdot"K" = "0.083145 L"cdot"bar/mol"cdot"K"

Notice how we have just equated "J" with "L"cdot"bar", a "P"cdot"V" unit. Neat. That's how we can get volume.

It would also help to know the conversion factor from "Pa" to "bar" to get the units to cancel:

"1 bar" = 10^5 "Pa"

That's all we need to convert into units that will cancel out to give a volume. Let's convert the denominator and then the numerator.

120 cancel"kPa" xx (1000 cancel"Pa")/cancel"1 kPa" xx "1 bar"/(10^5 cancel"Pa") = color(green)("1.2 bar")

Now for the numerator. Here's something cool. That's right, \mathbf(R) can be a conversion factor!

1580 cancel"J" xx ("0.083145 L"cdot"bar")/(8.314472 cancel"J")

= color(green)("15.80 L"cdot"bar")

And finally, with the right units, we get the initial volume to be:

color(blue)(V_1) = ("15.80 L"cdotcancel"bar")/(1.2 cancel"bar") = color(blue)("13.2 L")

And V_2 = "6.6 L" because why not.