Solveeit Logo

Question

Question: One mole of an ideal monatomic gas undergoes a process described by the equation \(P{{V}^{3}}=\text{...

One mole of an ideal monatomic gas undergoes a process described by the equation PV3= constantP{{V}^{3}}=\text{ constant}. The heat capacity of the gas during this process is:

A.)RR
B.)32R\dfrac{3}{2}R
C.)52R\dfrac{5}{2}R
D.)2R2R

Explanation

Solution

Hint: A Polytropic process is given by the equation PVx=constantP{{V}^{x}}=\text{constant} and xx here is called a polytropic index. Specific heat and Heat capacity can be determined using the equation of polytropic process.

Formula used:

C=Cv+R1xC={{C}_{v}}+\dfrac{R}{1-x}

Complete step by step answer:
A polytropic process obeys a specific type of equation PVx=constantP{{V}^{x}}=\text{constant} where PP is the pressure of the gas, VV is the volume of gas and xx is polytropic constant.

Heat capacity is the amount of heat required to raise the temperature of a certain amount of substance by 1 kelvin. For gases, the molar heat capacity CC is the heat required to increase the temperature of 1 mole gas by 1 kelvin.

Heat capacity in polytropic process is given by:

C=Cv+R1xC={{C}_{v}}+\dfrac{R}{1-x}

Where Cv{{C}_{v}} is the value of heat capacity at constant volume, RR is the gas constant and xx is polytropic index.

In the given equation we have, PV3= constantP{{V}^{3}}=\text{ constant}

Comparing above equation with the equation of polytropic process we get x=3x=3

Also, for monoatomic gas, Cv=32R{{C}_{v}}=\dfrac{3}{2}R

By applying C=Cv+R1xC={{C}_{v}}+\dfrac{R}{1-x}, we get

C=32R+R13=32R12R=RC=\dfrac{3}{2}R+\dfrac{R}{1-3}=\dfrac{3}{2}R-\dfrac{1}{2}R=R
C=RC=R

Heat capacity of the gas during a given process is RR.

Hence, the correct option is A.

Note:
Students should not get confused between the terms Molar heat capacity and Specific heat capacity. Molar heat capacity is the amount of heat required to raise the temperature of one mole of a pure substance by one kelvin, while Specific heat capacity is the amount of heat needed to raise the temperature of one gram of a pure substance by one kelvin.