Molar gas constant: Difference between revisions
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Unfortunately, many authors in the technical literature sometimes use <math>R</math> as the specific gas constant without denoting it as such or stating that it is the specific gas constant. This can and does lead to confusion for many readers. | Unfortunately, many authors in the technical literature sometimes use <math>R</math> as the specific gas constant without denoting it as such or stating that it is the specific gas constant. This can and does lead to confusion for many readers. | ||
==The specific gas constant== | |||
The gas constant of a specific gas, as differentiated from the above universal molar gas constant which applies for any ideal gas, is designated by the symbol '''''R'''''<sub>s</sub> and is equal to the molar gas constant divided by the molecular mass ('''''M''''') of the gas: | |||
:'''''R'''''<sub>s</sub> '''''= R ÷ M''''' | |||
The specific gas constant for an ideal gas may also be obtained from the following thermodynamics relationship:[2] | |||
:'''''R'''''<sub>s</sub> '''''= c'''''<sub>p</sub> '''''– c'''''<sub>v</sub> | |||
where c'''''<sub>p</sub> and c'''''<sub>v</sub> are the gas's specific heats at constant pressure and constant volume respectively. | |||
Some example values of the specific gas constant are: | |||
* ''Ammonia (molecular mass of 17.032 g · mol<sup>–1</sup>)'' : '''''R'''''<sub>s</sub> '''= 0.4882 J · K<sup>–1</sup> · g<sup>–1</sup>''' | |||
* ''Hydrogen (molecular mass of 2.016 g · mol<sup>–1</sup>)'' : '''''R'''''<sub>s</sub> '''= 4.1242 J · K<sup>–1</sup> · g<sup>–1</sup>''' | |||
* ''Methane (molecular mass of 16.043 g · mol<sup>–1</sup>)'' : '''''R'''''<sub>s</sub> '''= 0.5183 J · K<sup>–1</sup> · g<sup>–1</sup>''' | |||
Unfortunately, many authors in the technical literature sometimes use '''''R''''' as the specific gas constant without designating it as such or stating that it is the specific gas constant. This can and does lead to confusion for many readers. | |||
==Reference== | ==Reference== | ||
{{reflist}} | {{reflist}} |
Revision as of 11:07, 19 January 2012
Values of R | Units |
---|---|
8.3144621 | J·K-1·mol-1 |
0.082057 | L·atm·K-1·mol-1 |
8.205745 × 10-5 | m3·atm·K-1·mol-1 |
8.3144621 | L·kPa·K-1·mol-1 |
8.3144621 | m3·Pa·K-1·mol-1 |
62.36367 | L·mmHg·K-1·mol-1 |
62.36367 | L·torr·K-1·mol-1 |
83.144621 | L·mbar·K-1·mol-1 |
10.7316 | ft3·psi· °R-1·lb-mol-1 |
0.73024 | ft3·atm·°R-1·lb-mol-1 |
In chemistry, chemical engineering and physics, the molar gas constant (also called universal gas constant) R is a fundamental physical constant which appears in a large number of fundamental equations in the physical sciences, such as the ideal gas law and other equations of state and the Nernst equation. It is equivalent to the the Boltzmann constant (kB) times Avogadro's constant (N): R = kBNA.
Currently its most accurate value is:[1]
- R = 8.3144621 J · K-1 · mol-1
The gas constant occurs in the ideal gas law as follows:
where:
- P is the gas absolute pressure
- T is the gas absolute temperature
- V is the volume the gas occupies
- n is the number of moles of gas
- Vm is the molar volume
Notation for the gas constant
The gas constant defined in this article is the universal gas constant, , that applies to any gas. There is also a specific gas constant, which can be denoted as . The specific gas constant is defined as where is the molecular weight.
Unfortunately, many authors in the technical literature sometimes use as the specific gas constant without denoting it as such or stating that it is the specific gas constant. This can and does lead to confusion for many readers.
The specific gas constant
The gas constant of a specific gas, as differentiated from the above universal molar gas constant which applies for any ideal gas, is designated by the symbol Rs and is equal to the molar gas constant divided by the molecular mass (M) of the gas:
- Rs = R ÷ M
The specific gas constant for an ideal gas may also be obtained from the following thermodynamics relationship:[2]
- Rs = cp – cv
where cp and cv are the gas's specific heats at constant pressure and constant volume respectively.
Some example values of the specific gas constant are:
- Ammonia (molecular mass of 17.032 g · mol–1) : Rs = 0.4882 J · K–1 · g–1
- Hydrogen (molecular mass of 2.016 g · mol–1) : Rs = 4.1242 J · K–1 · g–1
- Methane (molecular mass of 16.043 g · mol–1) : Rs = 0.5183 J · K–1 · g–1
Unfortunately, many authors in the technical literature sometimes use R as the specific gas constant without designating it as such or stating that it is the specific gas constant. This can and does lead to confusion for many readers.
Reference
- ↑ Molar gas constant Obtained on January 19, 2012 from the NIST website