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What is the boyles law equation for both
1) REAL gas
2)ideal gas

2007-07-07 05:47:54 · 5 answers · asked by wizard 1 in Science & Mathematics Chemistry

5 answers

hi
i will help u out...

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FOR REAL GASES

PV= A+ Bp+Cp^2 +........................
where A>B>C>....

THESE A,B,C,D ARE VIRAL coefficients/...........

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FOR IDEAL GASES

P proportional to 1/V

PV= CONSTANT......

P1 * V1 = P2 * V2

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Hope this the best answer..
all the best

2007-07-07 06:19:26 · answer #1 · answered by Rohan 4 · 0 1

Well, real gas equation is the van der Waals equation of the combined gas law ( not just Boyles Law ).

Ideal gas eqn: PV = K
K is any constant.

2007-07-07 05:59:48 · answer #2 · answered by Shobiz 3 · 0 1

A gas that is sufficiently dilute, e.g. high temperatures, low pressures, behaves as an ideal gas.

By "ideal" one means that there are no interactions between gas molecules, e.g. dispersion, Van der Waals forces. When the gas is dilute, then these interactions obviously become less relevant. Thus air can be considered an "ideal gas" but liquid nitrogen cannot.

2007-07-07 06:13:11 · answer #3 · answered by supastremph 6 · 2 0

there is only one Boyle's law ( P1*V1=P2*V2)

the ideal gas law is PV=nRT where n is moles of gas and R is a constant defined by the units of pressure

atm uses .082
kPa 8.314
mm Hg 62.4


real gasses behave as ideal gasses except at low temperatures or high pressures

2007-07-07 06:26:06 · answer #4 · answered by Laura 2 · 0 2

1) (P+a/V^2)(V-b)=constant

2) PV = constant

2007-07-07 06:11:37 · answer #5 · answered by ag_iitkgp 7 · 0 2

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