Hi,
I am confused about this question...
For a gas, T_c = 303.34 K, p_c = 48.08 atm, V_c = 0.1480 dm^3 mol^-1. Calculate the van der Waals perimeters (a,b) for the gas.
Given:
[tex]p_c=\frac{a}{27b^2}\\T_c=\frac{8a}{27Rb}[/tex]
My professor said to use the formulas for the critical pressure and temperature to solve for b and then plug it into an equation for a.
When you rearrange the critical pressure for a and substitute this into the critical temperature equation, you get (after rearranging):
[tex]b=\frac{RT_c}{8p_c}=0.06514\frac{dm^3}{mol}[/tex]
However...
If you derive the critical volume with the van der Waals equation you find it is equal to V_c = 3b. I figured it would be easier to solve for b just using this, but when I do I get...
[tex]b=\frac{V_c}{3}=0.04933\frac{dm^3}{mol}[/tex]
Why are the answers different??
Thanks