Exploration 20.4
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The kinetic energy of a particle can be due to motion in the x direction,
y direction, z direction, as well as rotations. The equiparition of energy
theorem says that the kinetic energy of an atom or particle is, on average,
equally distributed between the different modes available or different degrees
of freedom. An atom free to move in a room has three degrees of freedom
because it can move in x, y and z directions. The energy per particle has
an average kinetic energy of (f/2)kBT where f is the number of
degrees of freedom, kB is the Boltzmann constant and T is the
temperature. Restart.
- In this animation of atoms in a box, why do the atoms only have 2 degrees
of freedom? The table shows the total kinetic energy of all particles in
the box as well as the average kinetic energy of atoms and molecules in the
box (the animation averages over a 10-second period so you need to wait
10 seconds to read the averages).
- Record the total energy.
- What is
the energy per particle?
- If the energy is given in Joules/kB, what
is the temperature inside the box?
Try this animation with 20 diatomic molecules. Notice that the graph
shows the total kinetic energy of the molecules and the kinetic energy of
translation (motion in x, y direction) and rotation.
- Why is the translational energy, on average, about two times the rotational kinetic
energy? (The animation averages over a 10-second interval so you need to wait
for the animation to run for at least 10 seconds to read the average values of
kinetic energy).
- For the total energy, what is the energy per particle?
- If the energy is given in Joules/kB, what is the temperature in the
box? (Remember that <KE>/particle = (f/2)kBT and in this case, f = 3
(why?).)
Now, try a mixture of 20 atoms and 20 molecules.
- Why is the temperature of the gas in the box a set value (not one value for atoms and
another for molecules)? (Hint: think about the air surrounding you at
essentially a constant temperature (unless the heater or air-conditioner just
turned on and made one section of the air a different temperature). Air
is made up of atoms: helium and molecules: water, oxygen, nitrogen).
- After waiting at least 10 seconds, compare average values. What
value is the average atomic kinetic energy close to?
- Why should those
two values (the two averages that you found in part (i)), averaged over a long period of time, be equal and greater than the
rotational kinetic energy of the molecule?
- Explain why the total energy
should be equal to (2/2)20kBT + (3/2)20kBT.
- From the total
energy (given in Joules/kB), what is the temperature?
- In this animation, if a mixture has 15 atoms, how many diatomic molecules
should it have so that the average kinetic energies of both particles is the
same? Try setting the number of atoms and molecules to check your
answer.
Exploration by Anne J. Cox
Script by Wolfgang Christian modified by Anne J. Cox
© 2003 by Prentice-Hall, Inc. A Pearson Company