Why is van der Waals equation used?
1 Answer
Well, real gases have intermolecular forces, don't they?
And thus, we use the van der Waals equation of state to account for such forces:
P = (RT)/(barV - b) - a/(barV^2)
These forces manifest themselves in:
a , a constant that accounts for the average forces of attraction.b , a constant that accounts for the fact that gases are not always negligible compared to the size of their container.
and these modify the true molar volume,
barul|stackrel(" ")(" "barV^3 - (b + (RT)/P)barV^2 + a/PbarV - (ab)/P = 0" ")|
For this, we need
- specified pressure
P in"bar" , - temperature
T in"K" , R = "0.083145 L"cdot"bar/mol"cdot"K" ,- vdW constants
a in"L"^2"bar/mol"^2 andb in"L/mol" .
Then this can be solved via whatever method you want to solve this cubic. [This is gone into more detail here.](https://socratic.org/questions/how-can-i-calculate-the-molar-volume-of-a-non-ideal-gas?source=search)
Three solutions arise:
- One
barV is of the liquid. - One
barV is of the gas. - One
barV is a so-called spurious (i.e. UNPHYSICAL) solution.
To know what you have just gotten, compare with the other