Kinetic theory of gases
Kinetic theory (or kinetic theory of gases) attempts to explain macroscopic properties of gases, such as pressure, temperature, or volume, by considering their molecular composition and motion. Essentially, the theory posits that pressure is due not to static repulsion between molecules, as was Isaac Newton's conjecture, but due to collisions between molecules moving at different velocities. Kinetic theory is also known as the Kinetic-Molecular Theory or the Collision Theory or the Kinetic-Molecular Theory of Gases.
Postulates
The theory for ideal gases makes the following assumptions:
- The gas consists of very small particles, all with non-zero mass.
- The number of molecules is large such that statistical treatment can be applied.
- These molecules are in constant, random motion. The rapidly moving particles constantly collide with the walls of the container.
- The collisions of gas particles with the walls of the container holding them are perfectly elastic.
- The interactions among molecules are negligible. They exert no forces on one another except during collisions.
- The total volume of the individual gas molecules added up is negligible compared to the volume of the container. This is equivalent to stating that the average distance separating the gas particles is relatively large compared to their size.
- The molecules are perfectly spherical in shape, and elastic in nature.
- The average kinetic energy of the gas particles depends only on the temperature of the system.
- Relativistic effects are negligible.
- Quantum-mechanical effects are negligible. This means that the inter-particle distance is much larger than the thermal de Broglie wavelength and the molecules can be treated as classical objects.
- The time during collision of molecule with the container's wall is negligible as comparable to the time between successive collisions.
- The equations of motion of the molecules are time-reversible.
In addition, if the gas is in a container, the collisions with the walls are assumed to be instantaneous and elastic.
More modern developments relax these assumptions and are based on the Boltzmann equation. These can accurately describe the properties of dense gases, because they include the volume of the molecules. The necessary assumptions are the absence of quantum effects, molecular chaos and small gradients in bulk properties. Expansions to higher orders in the density are known as virial expansions. The definitive work is the book by Chapman and Enskog but there have been many modern developments and there is an alternative approach developed by Grad based on moment expansions.[citation needed] In the other limit, for extremely rarefied gases, the gradients in bulk properties are not small compared to the mean free paths. This is known as the Knudsen regime and expansions can be performed in the Knudsen number.
The kinetic theory has also been extended to include inelastic collisions in granular matter by Jenkins and others.[citation needed]
Factors
Pressure
Pressure is explained by kinetic theory as arising from the force exerted by gas molecules impacting on the walls of the container. Consider a gas of N molecules, each of mass m, enclosed in a cuboidal container of volume V. When a gas molecule collides with the wall of the container perpendicular to the x coordinate axis and bounces off in the opposite direction with the same speed (an elastic collision), then the momentum lost by the particle and gained by the wall is:
where vx is the x-component of the initial velocity of the particle.
The particle impacts the wall once every 2l/vx time units (where l is the length of the container). Although the particle impacts a side wall once every 1l/vx time units, only the momentum change on one wall is considered so that the particle produces a momentum change on a particular wall once every 2l/vx time units.
The force due to this particle is:
The total force acting on the wall is:
where the summation is over all the gas molecules in the container.
The magnitude of the velocity for each particle will follow:
Now considering the total force acting on all six walls, adding the contributions from each direction we have:
where the factor of two arises from now considering both walls in a given direction.
Assuming there are a large number of particles moving sufficiently randomly, the force on each of the walls will be approximately the same and now considering the force on only one wall we have:
The quantity can be written as , where the bar denotes an average, in this case an average over all particles. This quantity is also denoted by where is the root-mean-square velocity of the collection of particles.
Thus the force can be written as:
Pressure, which is force per unit area, of the gas can then be written as:
where A is the area of the wall of which the force exerted on is considered.
Thus, as cross-sectional area multiplied by length is equal to volume, we have the following expression for the pressure
where V is the volume. Then we have
As Nm is the total mass of the gas, the density is mass divided by volume . Then the pressure is
This result is interesting and significant, because it relates pressure, a macroscopic property, to the average (translational) kinetic energy per molecule which is a microscopic property. Note that the product of pressure and volume is simply two thirds of the total kinetic energy.
Temperature and kinetic energy
From the ideal gas law
(1)
where is the Boltzmann constant, and the absolute temperature,
and from the above result
we have
then the temperature takes the form
(2)
which leads to the expression of the kinetic energy of a molecule
The kinetic energy of the system is N time that of a molecule
The temperature becomes
(3)
Eq.(3)1 is one important result of the kinetic theory: The average molecular kinetic energy is proportional to the absolute temperature.
From Eq.(1) and Eq.(3)1, we have
(4)
Thus, the product of pressure and volume per mole is proportional to the average (translational) molecular kinetic energy.
Eq.(1) and Eq.(4) are called the "classical results", which could also be derived from statistical mechanics; for more details, see [1].
Since there are degrees of freedom (dofs) in a monoatomic-gas system with particles, the kinetic energy per dof is
(5)
In the kinetic energy per dof, the constant of proportionality of temperature is 1/2 times Boltzmann constant. This result is related to the equipartition theorem.
As noted in the article on heat capacity, diatomic gases should have 7 degrees of freedom, but the lighter gases act as if they have only 5.
Thus the kinetic energy per kelvin (monatomic ideal gas) is:
- per mole: 12.47 J
- per molecule: 20.7 yJ = 129 μeV
At standard temperature (273.15 K), we get:
- per mole: 3406 J
- per molecule: 5.65 zJ = 35.2 meV
Number of collisions with wall
One can calculate the number of atomic or molecular collisions with a wall of a container per unit area per unit time.
Assuming an ideal gas, a derivation[2] results in an equation for total number of collisions per unit time per area:
RMS speeds of molecules
From the kinetic energy formula it can be shown that
with v in m/s, T in kelvins, and R is the gas constant. The molar mass is given as kg/mol. The most probable speed is 81.6% of the rms speed, and the mean speeds 92.1% (distribution of speeds). hk
History
In 1738 Daniel Bernoulli published Hydrodynamica, which laid the basis for the kinetic theory of gases. In this work, Bernoulli positioned the argument, still used to this day, that gases consist of great numbers of molecules moving in all directions, that their impact on a surface causes the gas pressure that we feel, and that what we experience as heat is simply the kinetic energy of their motion. The theory was not immediately accepted, in part because conservation of energy had not yet been established, and it was not obvious to physicists how the collisions between molecules could be perfectly elastic.
Other pioneers of the kinetic theory (which were neglected by their contemporaries) were Mikhail Lomonosov (1747),[3] Georges-Louis Le Sage (ca. 1780, published 1818),[4] John Herapath (1816)[5] and John James Waterston (1843),[6] which connected their research with the development of mechanical explanations of gravitation. In 1856 August Krönig (probably after reading a paper of Waterston) created a simple gas-kinetic model, which only considered the translational motion of the particles. [7]
In 1857 Rudolf Clausius, according to his own words independently of Krönig, developed a similar, but much more sophisticated version of the theory which included translational and contrary to Krönig also rotational and vibrational molecular motions. In this same work he introduced the concept of mean free path of a particle. [8] In 1859, after reading a paper by Clausius, James Clerk Maxwell formulated the Maxwell distribution of molecular velocities, which gave the proportion of molecules having a certain velocity in a specific range. This was the first-ever statistical law in physics.[9] In his 1873 thirteen page article 'Molecules', Maxwell states: “we are told that an 'atom' is a material point, invested and surrounded by 'potential forces' and that when 'flying molecules' strike against a solid body in constant succession it causes what is called pressure of air and other gases.”[10] In 1871, Ludwig Boltzmann generalized Maxwell's achievement and formulated the Maxwell–Boltzmann distribution. Also the logarithmic connection between entropy and probability was first stated by him.
In the beginning of twentieth century, however, atoms were considered by many physicists to be purely hypothetical constructs, rather than real objects. An important turning point was Albert Einstein's (1905)[11] and Marian Smoluchowski's (1906)[12] papers on Brownian motion, which succeeded in making certain accurate quantitative predictions based on the kinetic theory.
See also
- Bogoliubov-Born-Green-Kirkwood-Yvon hierarchy of equations
- Boltzmann equation
- Collision theory
- Critical temperature
- Gas laws
- Heat
- Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution
- Thermodynamics
- Vlasov equation
References
- Clausius, R. (1857), "Ueber die Art der Bewegung, welche wir Wärme nennen", Annalen der Physik, 100: 353–379, doi:10.1002/andp.18571760302
- Einstein, A. (1905), "Über die von der molekularkinetischen Theorie der Wärme geforderte Bewegung von in ruhenden Flüssigkeiten suspendierten Teilchen" (PDF), Annalen der Physik, 17: 549–560, doi:10.1002/andp.19053220806
- Herapath, J. (1816), "On the physical properties of gases", Annals of Philosophy: 56–60
- Herapath, J. (1821), "On the Causes, Laws and Phenomena of Heat, Gases, Gravitation", Annals of Philosophy, 9: 273–293
- Krönig, A. (1856), "Grundzüge einer Theorie der Gase", Annalen der Physik, 99: 315–322, doi:10.1002/andp.18561751008
- Le Sage, G.-L. (1818), "Physique Mécanique des Georges-Louis Le Sage", in Prévost, Pierre (ed.), Deux Traites de Physique Mécanique, Geneva & Paris: J.J. Paschoud, pp. 1–186
- Lomonosow, M. (1758/1970), Henry M. Leicester (ed.), Mikhail Vasil'evich Lomonosov on the Corpuscular Theory, Cambridge: Harvard University Press: 224–233
{{citation}}
:|chapter=
ignored (help); Check date values in:|year=
(help); External link in
(help); Missing or empty|chapterurl=
|title=
(help); Unknown parameter|chapterurl=
ignored (|chapter-url=
suggested) (help)CS1 maint: year (link)
- Mahon, Basil (2003), The Man Who Changed Everything – the Life of James Clerk Maxwell, Hoboken, NJ: Wiley, ISBN 0-470-86171-1
- Maxwell, James Clerk (1873), "Molecules", Nature, 417, doi:10.1038/417903a
- Smoluchowski, M. (1906), "Zur kinetischen Theorie der Brownschen Molekularbewegung und der Suspensionen", Annalen der Physik, 21: 756–780, doi:10.1002/andp.19063261405
- Waterston, John James (1843), Thoughts on the Mental Functions (reprinted in his Papers, 3, 167, 183.)
- Endnotes
The Mathematical Theory of Non-uniform Gases : An Account of the Kinetic Theory of Viscosity, Thermal Conduction and Diffusion in Gases Sydney Chapman, T. G. Cowling
External links
- Early Theories of Gases
- Thermodynamics - a chapter from an online textbook
- Temperature and Pressure of an Ideal Gas: The Equation of State on Project PHYSNET.
- Introduction to the kinetic molecular theory of gases, from The Upper Canada District School Board
- Java animation illustrating the kinetic theory from University of Arkansas
- Flowchart linking together kinetic theory concepts, from HyperPhysics
- Interactive Java Applets allowing high school students to experiment and discover how various factors affect rates of chemical reactions.
- Molecular kinetic theory fundamentals