An animation
showing the relationship between pressure and volume when amount and
temperature are held constant.
Boyle's law (sometimes
referred to as the Boyle–Mariotte law) states that the absolute pressure
and volume
of a given mass of confined gas are inversely proportional, if the temperature
remains unchanged within a closed system.Thus, it states that the product of pressure and volume is a constant for a
given mass of confined gas as long as the temperature is constant. The law was
named after chemist
and physicist
Robert Boyle,
who published the original law in 1662.
History
A graph of
Boyle's original data[citation needed]
This
relationship between pressure and volume was first noted by two amateur
scientists, Richard Towneley and Henry Power.
Boyle confirmed their discovery through experiments and published the results.
According to Robert Gunther and other authorities, it was
Boyle's assistant, Robert Hooke, who built the experimental
apparatus. Boyle's law is based on experiments with air, which he considered to
be a fluid of particles at rest in between small invisible springs. At that
time, air was still seen as one of the four elements, but Boyle disagreed.
Boyle's interest was probably to understand air as an essential element of
life;for example, he published works on the growth of plants without air.The French physicist Edme Mariotte (1620–1684) discovered the same
law independently of Boyle in 1676,
but Boyle had already published it in 1662. Thus this law may, improperly, be
referred to as Mariotte's or the Boyle–Mariotte law. Later, in 1687 in the PhilosophiƦ Naturalis Principia
Mathematica, Newton showed mathematically that if an elastic
fluid consisting of particles at rest, between which are repulsive forces
inversely proportional to their distance, the density would be directly
proportional to the pressure,but this mathematical treatise is not the physical explanation for the observed
relationship. Instead of a static theory a kinetic theory is needed, which was
provided two centuries later by Maxwell and Boltzmann.
Definition
The law itself
can be stated as follows:
For a fixed
amount of an ideal gas
kept at a fixed temperature, P [pressure] and V [volume] are
inversely proportional (while one doubles, the other halves).
Therefore when
the volume is halved, the pressure is doubled; so if the volume is doubled, the
pressure is halved.
Relation to kinetic theory and ideal gases
Boyle’s law
states that at constant temperature for a fixed mass, the absolute
pressure and the volume of a gas are inversely proportional. The law can also
be stated in a slightly different manner, that the product of absolute pressure
and volume is always constant.
Most gases
behave like ideal gases
at moderate pressures and temperatures. The technology of the 17th century
could not produce high pressures or low temperatures. Hence, the law was not
likely to have deviations at the time of publication. As improvements in
technology permitted higher pressures and lower temperatures, deviations from
the ideal gas behavior became noticeable, and the relationship between pressure
and volume can only be accurately described employing real gas
theory.The deviation is expressed as the compressibility factor.
Robert Boyle (and
Edme Mariotte) derived the law solely on experimental grounds. The law can also
be derived theoretically based on the presumed existence of atoms and molecules
and assumptions about motion and perfectly elastic collisions (see kinetic theory of gases). These
assumptions were met with enormous resistance in the positivist
scientific community at the time however, as they were seen as purely
theoretical constructs for which there was not the slightest observational
evidence.
Daniel
Bernoulli in 1737-1738 derived Boyle's law using Newton's laws of motion with application
on a molecular level. It remained ignored until around 1845, when John
Waterston published a paper building the main precepts of kinetic
theory; this was rejected by the Royal Society of England. Later works of James Prescott Joule, Rudolf
Clausius and in particular Ludwig Boltzmann firmly established the kinetic theory of gases and brought
attention to both the theories of Bernoulli and Waterston.
The debate
between proponents of Energetics and Atomism led Boltzmann to write a book in 1898, which endured
criticism up to his suicide in 1906.Albert
Einstein in 1905 showed how kinetic theory applies to the Brownian
motion of a fluid-suspended particle, which was confirmed in 1908 by
Jean Perrin.
Equation
The
mathematical equation for Boyle's law is:
where:
p denotes the pressure
of the system.
V denotes the volume of the
gas.
k is a constant value representative of
the pressure and volume of the system.
So long as temperature
remains constant the same amount of energy given to the system persists
throughout its operation and therefore, theoretically, the value of k
will remain constant. However, due to the derivation of pressure as
perpendicular applied force and the probabilistic likelihood of collisions with
other particles through collision theory, the application of force to a
surface may not be infinitely constant for such values of k, but will
have a limit when differentiating such values over a given
time.
Forcing the
volume V of the fixed quantity of gas to increase, keeping the gas at
the initially measured temperature, the pressure p must decrease
proportionally. Conversely, reducing the volume of the gas increases the
pressure.
Boyle's law is
used to predict the result of introducing a change, in volume and pressure
only, to the initial state of a fixed quantity of gas. The before and after
volumes and pressures of the fixed amount of gas, where the before and after
temperatures are the same (heating or cooling will be required to meet this
condition), are related by the equation:
Here P1
and V1 represent the original pressure and volume,
respectively, and P2 and V2 represent the
second pressure and volume.
Boyle's law, Charles's law,
and Gay-Lussac's law form the combined gas
law. The three gas laws in combination with Avogadro's
law can be generalized by the ideal gas law.
References
6.
^ Greiner,
Walter; Neise, Ludwig; Stƶcker, Horst (1997). Thermodynamics
and Statistical Mechanics (Corr. 2nd printing ed.). Springer.
p. 9. ISBN 0-3-87-94299-8. Retrieved
22 November 2012. "Already in 1664, R. Boyle, and shortly later (1676) but
independently from him, E. Mariotte found a general relationship between the
pressure and the volume of a gas at constant temperature..."
9.
^ a
b
c
Levine, Ira. N. (1978), p400 – Historical background of Boyle's law relation to
Kinetic Theory
What the situation that depend on this law?
BalasHapusWhat the meaning of ideal fluid?
BalasHapus