How do you calculate isothermal expansion?

1 Answer
Jul 4, 2017

I do it at the second half of this answer here.

Copy-and-pasted, we get...

CALCULATION EXAMPLE

Calculate the work performed in a reversible isothermal expansion by #1# #mol# of an ideal gas from #22.7# #L# to #45.4# #L# at #298.15# #K# and #1# #ba r#.

With the ideal gas law, we have that #PV = nRT#, or #P = (nRT)/V#. So, the work is:

#color(green)(w_(rev)) = -int_(V_1)^(V_2) PdV#

#= -int_(V_1)^(V_2) (nRT)/VdV#

#= -nRTlnV_2 - (-nRTlnV_1)#

#= color(green)(-nRTln(V_2/V_1))#,

negative with respect to the system.

We keep in mind that the pressure did change, but we don't have an idea of how, off-hand. The work thus does not use the pressure of #"1 bar"#:

#color(blue)(w_(rev)) = -("1 mol")("8.314472 J/mol"cdot"K")("298.15 K")ln("45.4 L"/"22.7 L")#

#=# #color(blue)(-"1718.3 J")#

So, the work involved the ideal gas exerting #"1718.3 J"# of energy to expand, expunging #"1718.3 J"# of heat from itself:

#cancel(DeltaU)^(0" for isothermal process") = q_(rev) + w_(rev)#

#=> color(blue)(q_(rev)) = -w_(rev) = color(blue)(+"1718.3 J")#