Greetings all,
so just recently I started reviewing my Thermodynamics and Kinetics. The problem is I'm running to is that I feel alot of it becomes math-heavy and difficult to comprehend or grasp the utility of.
Currently I"m trying to get the idea behind virial coefficients, related to the ideal gas law, in the form of:
pVm = RT (1+ B'p + C'p^2...).
Parts of it are fairly intuitive. Everything in the parentheses is related to Z, which is just compression factor explaining how far from ideal the gas is behaving, and the different coefficients have different affects on the relation.
But unlike compression factor, I'm not getting why the virial equation is itself useful? For example, how are we able to use the virial equation to derive other applicable versions of the gas law? (Ex: the van Der Waals equation). Or why do we need other versions of the gas law, if we have the virial equation, which is applicable in all instances?
If there are any simple explanations on this, I'd really appreciate it, thanks!
Edit: And if it helps, I'm getting all this from Atkins.