Real gas
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Real gas, as opposed to a Perfect or Ideal Gas, effects refers to an assumption base where the following are taken into account:
- Compressibility effects
- Variable heat capacity
- Van der Waals forces
- Non-equilibrium thermodynamic effects
- Issues with molecular dissociation and elementary reactions with variable composition.
For most applications, such a detailed analysis is "over-kill" and the ideal gas approximation is used. Real-gas models have to be used near condensation point of gases, near critical point, at very high pressures, and in several other less usual cases.
[edit] Modelisation
[edit] Van der Waals modelisation
Real gases are often modeled by taking into account their molar weight and molar volume

Where P is the pressure, T is the temperature, R the ideal gas constant, and Vm the molar volume. a and b are parameters that are determined empirically for each gas, but are sometimes estimated from their critical temperature (Tc) and critical pressure (Pc) using these relations:


[edit] Redlich–Kwong modelisation
The Redlich–Kwong equation is another two-parameters equation that is used to modelize real gases. It is almost always more accurate than the Van der Waals equation, and often more accurate than some equation with more than two parameters. The equation is

where a and b two empirical parameters that are not the same parameters as in the Van der Waals equation.
[edit] Berthelot and modified Berthelot modelisation
The Berthelot Equation is very rarely used,

but the modified version is somewhat more accurate

[edit] Dieterici modelisation
This modelisation fell out of usage in recent years

[edit] Clausius modelisation
The Clausius equation is a very simple three-parameter equation used to model gases.

where



[edit] Virial Modelisation
The Virial equation derives from a perturbative treatment of statistical mechanics.

or alternatively

where A, B, C, A′, B′, and C′ are temperature dependent constants.
[edit] Peng-Robinson Modelisation
This two parameter equation has the interesting property being useful in modeling some liquids as well as real gases.

[edit] Wohl modelisation
The Wohl equation is formulated in terms of critial values, making it useful when real gas constants are not available.

where



[edit] Beatte-Bridgeman Modelisation
The Beattie-Bridgeman equation

where d is the molal density and a, b, c, A, and B are empirical parameters.
[edit] Benedict-Webb-Rubin Modelisation
The BWR equation, sometimes referred to as the BWRS equation
![P=RTd+d^2\left(RT(B+bd)-(A+ad-a{\alpha}d^4)-\frac{1}{T^2}[C-cd(1+{\gamma}d^2)\exp(-{\gamma}d^2)]\right)](http://upload.wikimedia.org/math/5/1/0/5108657b5aa3d12447180e3d0375bd1b.png)
Where d is the molal density and where a, b, c, A, B, C, α, and γ are empirical constants.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
http://www.ccl.net/cca/documents/dyoung/topics-orig/eq_state.html

