Internal pressure is a measure of how the internal energy of a system changes when it expands or contracts at constant temperature. It has the same dimensions as pressure, the SI unit of which is the pascal.
Internal pressure is usually given the symbol
\piT
\piT=\left(
\partialU | |
\partialV |
\right)T
Internal pressure can be expressed in terms of temperature, pressure and their mutual dependence:
\piT=T\left(
\partialp | |
\partialT |
\right)V-p
This equation is one of the simplest thermodynamic equations. More precisely, it is a thermodynamic property relation, since it holds true for any system and connects the equation of state to one or more thermodynamic energy properties. Here we refer to it as a "thermodynamic equation of state."
The fundamental thermodynamic equation states for the exact differential of the internal energy:
\operatorname{d}U=T\operatorname{d}S-p\operatorname{d}V
Dividing this equation by
\operatorname{d}V
\left(
\partialU | |
\partialV |
\right)T=T\left(
\partialS | |
\partialV |
\right)T-p
And using one of the Maxwell relations:
\left(
\partialS | |
\partialV |
\right)T=\left(
\partialp | |
\partialT |
\right)V
\piT=T\left(
\partialp | |
\partialT |
\right)V-p
In a perfect gas, there are no potential energy interactions between the particles, so any change in the internal energy of the gas is directly proportional to the change in the kinetic energy of its constituent species and therefore also to the change in temperature:
\operatorname{d}U\propto\operatorname{d}T
The internal pressure is taken to be at constant temperature, therefore
dT=0
dU=0
\piT=0
i.e. the internal energy of a perfect gas is independent of the volume it occupies. The above relation can be used as a definition of a perfect gas.
The relation
\piT=0
pV=nRT
\piT=T\left(
\partialp | |
\partialT |
\right)V-p=T(
nR | |
V |
)-(
nRT | |
V |
)=0
Real gases have non-zero internal pressures because their internal energy changes as the gases expand isothermally - it can increase on expansion (
\piT>0
\piT<0
In the limit of infinite volume these internal pressures reach the value of zero:
\limV\piT=0
corresponding to the fact that all real gases can be approximated to be perfect in the limit of a suitably large volume. The above considerations are summarized on the graph on the right.
If a real gas can be described by the van der Waals equation
p=
nRT | |
V-nb |
-a
n2 | |
V2 |
it follows from the thermodynamic equation of state that
\piT=a
n2 | |
V2 |
Since the parameter
a
The
a
Z
In addition, through the use of the Euler chain relation it can be shown that
\left(
\partialU | |
\partialV |
\right)T=-\left(
\partialU | |
\partialT |
\right)V\left(
\partialT | |
\partialV |
\right)U
Defining
\muJ=\left(
\partialT | |
\partialV |
\right)U
\left(
\partialU | |
\partialT |
\right)V
=CV
\piT=-CV\muJ
\muJ
U
James Joule tried to measure the internal pressure of air in his expansion experiment by adiabatically pumping high pressure air from one metal vessel into another evacuated one. The water bath in which the system was immersed did not change its temperature, signifying that no change in the internal energy occurred. Thus, the internal pressure of the air was apparently equal to zero and the air acted as a perfect gas. The actual deviations from the perfect behaviour were not observed since they are very small and the specific heat capacity of water is relatively high.
Much later, in 1925 Frederick Keyes and Francis Sears published measurements of the Joule effect for carbon dioxide at
T1
P1
\muJ
\piT
CO2