Ideal Gas Laws

3 min read Updated Tue Apr 28 2026 07:56:31 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)

Ideal gases follow simple relations between PP, VV, and TT. Can be applied to ideal gases.

Properties of Fluids

Fluid properties describe measurable characteristics such as pressure, temperature, and volume.

  • Density: ρ=mV\rho = \frac{m}{V}.
  • Specific volume: v=Vm=1ρv = \frac{V}{m} = \frac{1}{\rho}.
  • Specific gravity: ratio of fluid density to reference density (water for liquids, air for gases).

Boyle’s Law

At constant temperature, PV=constantPV = \text{constant}.

Charles’ Law

At Constant Pressure

At constant pressure, VTV \propto T.

At Constant Volume

At constant volume, PTP \propto T.

Combined Gas Law

Derived using Boyle’s and Charles’ laws.

P1V1T1=P2V2T2\frac{P_1 V_1}{T_1} = \frac{P_2 V_2}{T_2}

Ideal Gas Law

Relates all three variables:

PV=mRT=RTvPV = mRT = \frac{RT}{v}

Here:

  • PP - pressure
  • VV - pressure
  • mm - mass
  • RR - specific gas constant
  • TT - absolute temperature
  • vv - specific volume

Universal Gas Constant

Ru=CpCv=8.314  JK1mol1R_u = C_p - C_v = 8.314 \;\text{J}\,\text{K}^{-1}\,\text{mol}^{-1}.

Gas Constant

Denoted by RR. Defined for each gas.

R=RuMR = \frac{R_u}{M}

Here MM is the molar mass of the gas.

Example: Rair=0.287  kJkg1K1R_\text{air} = 0.287\;\text{kJ}\,\text{kg}^{-1}\,\text{K}^{-1}.

Compressibility Factor

Denoted by ZZ. Real gases deviate from ideal behavior, especially near saturation and the critical point.

Z=PvRT=vrealvidealZ = \frac{Pv}{RT} = \frac{v_\text{real}}{v_\text{ideal}}

Z=1Z = 1 for an ideal gas. ZZ close to 1 means the gas behaves similar to ideal gas.

Z>1Z \gt 1 means the gas is hard to be compressed. Z<1Z \lt 1 means the gas is easy to be compressed.

When deviations matter

  • High pressure
  • Low temperature
  • Near critical region

Generalized Compressibility Chart

Different gases behave similarly when compared using normalized variables.

Reduced Pressure

PR=PPcP_R = \frac{P}{P_c}

When PR1P_R \ll 1, the gas shows ideal gas behavior.

Reduced Temperature

TR=TTcT_R = \frac{T}{T_c}

When TR>2T_R \gt 2, the gas shows ideal gas behavior.

Principle of Corresponding States

At the same PRP_R and TRT_R, different gases have nearly the same ZZ. Deviations largest near critical point.

Charts allow estimation of ZZ without equations.

Real-Gas Equations of State

Real-gas equations include molecular attraction and finite molecular volume.

Van der Waals Equation

(P+av2)(vb)=RT\left(P + \frac{a}{v^2}\right)(v - b)=RT

Due to intermolecular forces, measured pressure would be less than ideal pressure. Thus av2\frac{a}{v^2} is added.

Due to finite non-zero molecular size, ideal volume would be less than measured volume. Thus bb is subtracted.

a=27R2Tcr264Pcrandb=RTcr8Pcra = \frac{27R^2T_\text{cr}^2}{64 P_\text{cr}} \quad \text{and} \quad b = \frac{RT_\text{cr}}{8 P_\text{cr}}

Accuracy limited but conceptually useful.

Beattie–Bridgeman Equation

Based on five empirical constants. Accurate for densities up to about 0.8ρcr0.8\rho_{cr}.

P=RuTvˉ2(1cvˉT3)(vˉ+B)Avˉ2P = \frac{R_u T}{\bar{v}^2} \left( 1 - \frac{c}{\bar{v} T^3} \right)(\bar{v} + B) - \frac{A}{\bar{v}^2}

Here:

A=A0(1avˉ)andB=B0(1bvˉ)A = A_0 \left(1 - \frac{a}{\bar{v}}\right) \quad \text{and} \quad B = B_0 \left(1 - \frac{b}{\bar{v}}\right)

Benedict–Webb–Rubin Equation

Aka. BWR equation. Eight constants. Accurate up to 2.5ρcr2.5\rho_{cr}.

P=RuTvˉ+(B0RuTA0C0T2)1vˉ2+bRuTavˉ3+aαvˉ6+cvˉ3T2(1+γvˉ2)eγ/vˉ2P = \frac{R_u T}{\bar{v}} + \left( B_0 R_u T - A_0 - \frac{C_0}{T^2} \right)\frac{1}{\bar{v}^2} + \frac{b R_u T - a}{\bar{v}^3} + \frac{a \alpha}{\bar{v}^6} + \frac{c}{\bar{v}^3 T^2}\left(1 + \frac{\gamma}{\bar{v}^2}\right)e^{-\gamma/\bar{v}^2}

Virial Equation

Pv=RT[1+B(T)/v+C(T)/v2+]Pv = RT[1 + B(T)/v + C(T)/v^2 + \ldots]

B(T)B(T), C(T)C(T) are virial coefficients. Derived from statistical mechanics.