Hi everyone,
I'm having some trouble understanding a sentence in a textbook I'm reading, and was hoping someone could help clarify it for me.
The book I was reading last night stated the following: "To underscore the concept that gases behave more ideally at higher temperatures, if we increase the temperature of the system for any gas, the first term in the van der Waals equation approaches the pressure of the ideal gas while the second term remains unchanged"
This doesn't really make sense to me. If the system is held at constant volume, then I can see how increasing temperature will increase pressure and reduce the impact of (an^2/V^2), thus making the first term "approach the pressure of the ideal gas"; However, I don't understand why the second term (I think "second term" refers to (V-nb)) has to remain unchanged! If the pressure of the system was held constant, then obviously the volume would increase and become more ideal!
On the one hand, it makes conceptual sense that, in a constant volume container, increasing temperature will not affect volume (the same amount of space and molecules are present, although moving about faster); however, I still contend that volume would increase if pressure was held constant (PV = T).
What is the book trying to say? What am I missing here? Does temperature really only affect pressure and not volume?
Thank you everyone!