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  Home > JCE Print > Journal of Chemical Education > Issues > 2001  > December  >
Chemical Education Today
Letters
On Concepts of Partial Volume and Law of Partial Volume (re J. Chem. Educ. 2001, 78, 238-240)
David W. Miller
Georgia Military College, Martinez, GA 30907

Cover
December 2001
Vol. 78 No. 12
p. 1594

Full Text

In the article "A Simple Laboratory Experiment for the Determination of Absolute Zero" (J. Chem. Educ. 2001, 78, 238-240), Kim et al. introduce a quantity called partial volume. Used in the context of a Charles's law analysis, I found the term confusing, as it seems to imply that different components of a gaseous mixture can occupy different volumes within the same container. Unless I have overlooked a simple point, the authors appear to assume a law of partial volumes for a gas mixture analogous to the law of partial pressures.

I would suggest a more straightforward derivation of their final result, which shows a Charles's law proportionality between volume and absolute temperature for air trapped in an inverted graduated cylinder submerged in water. Treating the air as an ideal gas, the following relation holds:

PairV = nairRT

where the symbols have their usual meanings. In particular, Pair is the partial pressure of the trapped air and V is the total volume. Inserting Pair = P - PH2O from Dalton's law of partial pressures (where P is the total--approximately, barometric--pressure and PH2O is the water vapor pressure) and dividing both sides by P yields

The left side of the equation can be interpreted as an effective volume, which is proportional to the absolute temperature T. (The moles of air and total pressure are considered fixed.) The ratio of pressures is a dimensionless correction factor that accounts for the variation in water vapor pressure with temperature. While the result here is apparently identical to that reached in the article, I believe the present approach, which avoids the artifice of partial volume, is pedagogically more sound.

See Author's Reply.
More Information
*  Citation
Miller, David W. J. Chem. Educ. 2001 78 1594.
*  Keywords
Gases; Introductory / High School Chemistry; Laboratory Instruction; Physical Properties; Statistics / Data Analysis
*  History
Created:
Last Updated:
November 2, 2001
April 14, 2005
  Home > JCE Print > Journal of Chemical Education > Issues > 2001  > December  > Page 1594



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