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Molecular%20Speeds

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Title: Molecular%20Speeds


1
Molecular Speeds
  • Maxwell-Boltzmann Distribution REVIEW
  • For ideal gas at T, distribution of speeds
  • The M-B distribution function has property
  • This integral is the fraction of molecules with
    speeds lying between the limits v1 and v2
  • From the mean value theorem of calculus

2
Molecular Speeds
  • Maxwell-Boltzmann Distribution
  • Physical interpretation
  • Velocity components of molecule (vx, vy, vz). N
    molecules represented by N points in velocity
    space. Volume of space between v and v ?v is
    4?v2 ?v. Because kinetic energy depends on v,
    the volume of this velocity space is proportional
    to the number of ways of obtaining a particular
    kinetic energy (within a small range), i.e., all
    points in this thin spherical shell of fixed
    thickness ?v correspond to the same kinetic
    energy. The greater the radius of the shell, the
    more points it encloses.

3
Molecular Speeds
  • Maxwell-Boltzmann Distribution
  • Physical interpretation
  • We have 4?v2 in the distribution function. This
    says that, all else being equal, we expect more
    molecules to have speeds with a range between v
    and v ?v, where ?v is fixed, the larger the
    value of v. However, all else is not equal. The
    factoraccounts for the decreased likelihood
    that a molecule will have a given speed. The
    most probable speed, vp, is that for which f is a
    maximum. By differentiating our distribution
    function and setting it 0

4
Molecular Speeds
  • Maxwell-Boltzmann Distribution
  • Physical interpretation
  • We have
  • With this result, we can rewrite the distribution
    function as
  • To determine how vp depends on T, differentiate
    with respect to T to get
  • Then approximate the ratio of differences
  • ?vp/?T to get

5
Molecular Speeds
  • Maxwell-Boltzmann Distribution
  • Physical interpretation
  • According to this, if the temperature drops from
    20C to -20C, vp changes by 7. On average air
    molecules in summer move only slightly faster
    than in winter. The shift in the distribution of
    speeds with T is shown in the figure.
  • The most probable speed is only one of several
    possible speeds that can be used to characterize
    the distribution of molecular speeds. Lets look
    at some others

6
Molecular Speeds
  • Maxwell-Boltzmann Distribution
  • Physical interpretation
  • The mean speed is written as
  • The root-mean-square speed is written as
  • Where
  • The three speeds are shown on the right. They
    are not all that different (ratio 11.131.22).
    Any one of them could be used to specify the
    average speed, you just need to specify which
    average you use.

7
Intermolecular Separation
  • Characteristic of gas mostly empty space
  • From the ideal gas law
  • where n is the number density (/m3) of
    molecules.
  • Inverse of n is the average volume of space
    allocated to each molecule. Then
  • where d is the average separation between
    molecules.

8
Intermolecular Separation
  • Take p 105 Pa, and T 293 K
  • We calculate d 3.43 10-9 m (3.43 nm)
  • While molecules have no sharp boundaries, the
    approximate diameter of common atmospheric
    molecules is d0 0.3 nm.
  • Volume fraction of air occupied by matter is the
    ratio of the molecular volume to the volume
    allocated to the molecule, i.e., (d0/d)3 ? 10-3.
    About 1 part per 1000 (by volume) of air is
    occupied by matter.

9
Mean Free Path
  • Intermolecular separation is not the distance a
    molecule must travel before interacting with
    another.
  • Consider cylindrical volume of cross section A,
    length x, and molecular number density n (? 3
    1019 cm-3), then the total number of molecules is
    N nAx.
  • Assume molecules are spheres of diameter, d0.
  • Two spheres interact when centers approach each
    other within d0.
  • Consider projectile molecule a point and target
    molecule as sphere with collision cross section ?
    ?d02.
  • ? ? 3 10-15 cm2

10
Mean Free Path
  • Consider a point molecule incident at one end of
    the cylinder traveling parallel to cylinder
    x-axis. Its position on A where it enters the
    cylinder is random.
  • Question How far will it go before it collides
    with a target molecule?
  • Some may travel a short distance and some a
    longer distance.
  • The target area presented to point molecule over
    distance x is nAx?.
  • Total target cross-sectional area per cylinder
    cross sectional area is nx?.
  • This is, approximately, the probability that a
    point molecule will have a collision in distance
    x.

11
Mean Free Path
  • If nx? 1, the molecule is unlikely to not
    collide.
  • Corresponding distance, x ?, at which n?? 1
    is the mean free path.
  • As n increases, ? decreases.
  • As ? decreases, ? increases.
  • Because number density decreases exponentially
    with z, ? increases exponentially.
  • A more exact derivation would lead to the same
    expression, but with a numerical constant that is
    close to 1.

12
Mean Free Path
  • Using ? 3 10-15 cm2, and n 3 1019 cm-3,
    we get a mean free path of 0.1 ?m, an order of
    magnitude greater than the average molecular
    separation (3.4 nm).
  • Result makes physical sense.
  • In order for ? ? d, after each collision the
    molecule would have to rebound at an angle
    exactly toward its nearest neighbor. Not likely.

13
Intermolecular Collision Rate
  • Assume all molecules are fixed, except one.
  • All fixed molecules are points, the moving
    molecule a sphere with projected area ?.
  • In time ?t the molecule moving at speed v sweeps
    out a volume v?t?.
  • All fixed molecules collide with moving molecule.
  • Total number of collisions in time ?t is nv?t?.

14
Intermolecular Collision Rate
  • Collision rate obtained by dividing by ?t.
  • This yields nv?, the collision rate per molecule.
  • To obtain the collision rate per unit volume,
    multiply by the number density of molecules, n.
  • This yields the volume collision rate n2v?.
  • Because molecules are distributed in speed, we
    should interpret v as a mean relative speed.
  • We know that mean speeds are proportional to T ½.
  • Using this result and the ideal gas law, we can
    write the rate of intermolecular collisions/unit
    volume in a gas in the form
  • where C is a constant of order 1.

15
Intermolecular Collision Rate
  • Consider 2 different gases, both at the same T
    and p, but with different collision cross
    sections and masses.
  • According to our result, the intermolecular
    collision rates are different because m and ? are
    different.
  • This tells us that neither p nor T is determined
    by intermolecular collision rates.
  • None of the thermodynamic variables (p, T, ?)
    depends explicitly on collisions. Collisions
    provide for energy and momentum transfer, however
    (randomization).
  • For n 1019 cm-3, ? 10-15 cm2, and v 400
    m/s, the collision rate 4 1027 cm-3 s-1!!
  • High collision rate at the heart of thermodynamic
    equilibrium.

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