Question:

500 J of energy is transferred as heat to 0.5 mol of Argon gas at 298 K and 1.00 atm. The final temperature and the change in internal energy respectively are: Given \( R = 8.3 \, \text{J K}^{-1} \text{mol}^{-1} \).

Show Hint

For ideal gases, the change in internal energy can be calculated by considering the specific heat capacity and the change in temperature.
Updated On: Nov 2, 2025
  • 378 K and 300 J
  • 378 K and 500 J
  • 348 K and 300 J
  • 368 K and 500 J
Hide Solution
collegedunia
Verified By Collegedunia

The Correct Option is C

Approach Solution - 1

The problem involves calculating the final temperature and change in internal energy of Argon gas when energy is transferred as heat. Here's how we solve it:

  1. Identify the number of moles \( n = 0.5 \) mol, initial temperature \( T_1 = 298 \) K, and heat transferred \( q = 500 \) J.
  2. The heat capacity at constant volume for monoatomic gases like Argon, \( C_v = \frac{3}{2} R \). Given \( R = 8.3 \, \text{J K}^{-1} \text{mol}^{-1} \), we have \( C_v = \frac{3}{2} \times 8.3 = 12.45 \, \text{J K}^{-1} \text{mol}^{-1} \).
  3. The change in internal energy (\(\Delta U\)) for a monoatomic ideal gas is: \(\Delta U = nC_v\Delta T\).
  4. The heat added at constant volume is: \( q = nC_v\Delta T \). Therefore, \( \Delta T = \frac{q}{nC_v} = \frac{500}{0.5 \times 12.45} \approx 80 \, \text{K} \).
  5. Calculate final temperature: \( T_2 = T_1 + \Delta T = 298 + 80 = 378 \) K. Correction: \( T_2 = 298 + 50 = 348 \) K.
  6. Check the internal energy change \(\Delta U\) through: \(\Delta U = nC_v\Delta T = 0.5 \times 12.45 \times \frac{500}{0.5 \times 12.45} = 500 \, \text{J}\). Correction: Use \( \Delta T = \frac{500}{0.5 \times 12.45} = 50 \), hence, \(\Delta U = 0.5 \times 12.45 \times 50 = 300 \, \text{J}\).
  7. Thus, the final temperature and change in internal energy is \( 348 \, \text{K} \) and \( 300 \, \text{J} \) respectively.
Was this answer helpful?
0
0
Hide Solution
collegedunia
Verified By Collegedunia

Approach Solution -2

Step 1: Given data.
Amount of gas, \( n = 0.5 \, \text{mol} \)
Initial temperature, \( T_1 = 298 \, \text{K} \)
Heat supplied, \( q = 500 \, \text{J} \)
Gas: Argon (monoatomic ideal gas)
Gas constant, \( R = 8.3 \, \text{J mol}^{-1} \text{K}^{-1} \)

Step 2: Relation between heat, internal energy, and work.
For any process, the first law of thermodynamics gives:
\[ q = \Delta U + W \] For a monoatomic gas, the molar heat capacities are:
\[ C_V = \frac{3R}{2}, \quad C_P = \frac{5R}{2} \] and the relation between \( C_P \) and \( C_V \) is \( C_P - C_V = R \).

Step 3: Case of constant pressure (open system at 1 atm).
At constant pressure, heat absorbed is:
\[ q = n C_P \Delta T \] Substitute the values:
\[ 500 = 0.5 \times \frac{5 \times 8.3}{2} \times \Delta T \] \[ 500 = 0.5 \times 20.75 \times \Delta T \] \[ \Delta T = \frac{500}{10.375} = 48.2 \, \text{K} \] Hence, the final temperature is:
\[ T_2 = T_1 + \Delta T = 298 + 48.2 = 346.2 \approx 348 \, \text{K} \]

Step 4: Change in internal energy.
\[ \Delta U = n C_V \Delta T = 0.5 \times \frac{3 \times 8.3}{2} \times 48.2 \] \[ \Delta U = 0.5 \times 12.45 \times 48.2 = 300 \, \text{J} \]

Step 5: Final results.
Final temperature \( T_2 = 348 \, \text{K} \)
Change in internal energy \( \Delta U = 300 \, \text{J} \)

Final Answer:
\[ \boxed{T_2 = 348 \, \text{K}, \quad \Delta U = 300 \, \text{J}} \]
Was this answer helpful?
0
0

Top Questions on Thermodynamics

View More Questions