Advertisements
Advertisements
प्रश्न
The speed of sound in hydrogen at 0°C is 1280 m s−1. The density of hydrogen at STP is 0.089 kg m−3. Calculate the molar heat capacities Cp and Cv of hydrogen.
उत्तर
Given:
Velocity of sound in hydrogen, V = 1280 m/s
Temperature, T = 0°C = 273 K
Density of H2 = 0.089 kg/m3
R = 8.3 J/mol-K
At STP,
P = 105 Pa
We know:
`"V"_"sound" = (sqrt (gamma"p")/ρ )`
1280 = `sqrt ((gamma xx10 ^5)/0.089)`
Or `gamma = (1280 xx 1280 xx 0.089)/10^5`
= 1.46
`"C"_"p"/ "C"_"v" = gamma or "C"_"p" -"C"_"v" = "R" `
`"C"_"v" = "R"/(gamma-1) = 8.3 /(1.46-1)`
= 18.0J /mol -K
Cp = γ Cv =1.46 × 18.0
= 26.28 ≈ 26.3 / mol -K
APPEARS IN
संबंधित प्रश्न
A metre long narrow bore held horizontally (and closed at one end) contains a 76 cm long mercury thread, which traps a 15 cm column of air. What happens if the tube is held vertically with the open end at the bottom?
Given below are densities of some solids and liquids. Give rough estimates of the size of their atoms:
Substance | Atomic Mass (u) | Density (103 Kg m-3) |
Carbon (diamond) | 12.01 | 2.22 |
Gold | 197.00 | 19.32 |
Nitrogen (liquid) | 14.01 | 1.00 |
Lithium | 6.94 | 0.53 |
Fluorine (liquid) | 19.00 | 1.14 |
[Hint: Assume the atoms to be ‘tightly packed’ in a solid or liquid phase, and use the known value of Avogadro’s number. You should, however, not take the actual numbers you obtain for various atomic sizes too literally. Because of the crudeness of the tight packing approximation, the results only indicate that atomic sizes are in the range of a few Å].
Does a gas have just two specific heat capacities or more than two? Is the number of specific heat capacities of a gas countable?
Can we define specific heat capacity at constant temperature?
In a real gas, the internal energy depends on temperature and also on volume. The energy increases when the gas expands isothermally. Examining the derivation of Cp − Cv = R, find whether Cp − Cv will be more than R, less than R or equal to R for a real gas.
Can a process on an ideal gas be both adiabatic and isothermal?
Show that the slope of the p−V diagram is greater for an adiabatic process compared to an isothermal process.
Can two states of an ideal gas be connected by an isothermal process as well as an adiabatic process?
In an isothermal process on an ideal gas, the pressure increases by 0.5%. The volume decreases by about
5 g of a gas is contained in a rigid container and is heated from 15°C to 25°C. Specific heat capacity of the gas at constant volume is 0.172 cal g−1 °C−1 and the mechanical equivalent of heat is 4.2 J cal−1. Calculate the change in the internal energy of the gas
A mixture contains 1 mole of helium (Cp = 2.5 R, Cv = 1.5 R) and 1 mole of hydrogen (Cp= 3.5 R, Cv = 2.5 R). Calculate the values of Cp, Cv and γ for the mixture.
The figure shows two vessels with adiabatic walls, one containing 0.1 g of helium (γ = 1.67, M = 4 g mol−1) and the other containing some amount of hydrogen (γ = 1.4, M = 2 g mol−1). Initially, the temperatures of the two gases are equal. The gases are electrically heated for some time during which equal amounts of heat are given to the two gases. It is found that the temperatures rise through the same amount in the two vessels. Calculate the mass of hydrogen.
An engine takes in 5 moles of air at 20°C and 1 atm, and compresses it adiabatically to `1/10^"th"` of the original volume. Assuming air to be a diatomic ideal gas made up of rigid molecules, the change in its internal energy during this process comes out to be X kJ. The value of X to the nearest integer is ______.
A diatomic molecule can be modelled as two rigid balls connected with spring such that the balls can vibrate with respect to centre of mass of the system (spring + balls). Consider a diatomic gas made of such diatomic molecule. If the gas performs 20 Joule of work under isobaric condition, then heat given to the gas is ______ J.
If at same temperature and pressure, the densities for two diatomic gases are respectively d1 and d2 then the ratio of velocities of sound in these gases will be ______.