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36 - On the Work that may be gained during the Mixing of Gases

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 July 2011

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Summary

The well-known fact that hydrogen tends to escape through fine apertures more rapidly than air enters to supply its place, even although the advantage of the greater pressure may be on the side of the air, proves that the operation of mixing the two gases has a certain mechanical value. In a common form of the experiment a tube containing hydrogen and closed at the upper end with a porous plug of plaster of Paris stands over water. In a short time the escape of hydrogen creates a partial vacuum in the tube, and the water rises accordingly. Whenever then two gases are allowed to mix without the performance of work, there is dissipation of energy, and an opportunity of doing work at the expense of low temperature heat has been for ever lost. The present paper is an attempt to calculate this amount of work.

The result at which I have arrived is extremely simple. It appears that the work that may be done during the mixing of the volumes v1 and 2 of two different gases is the same as that which would be gained during the expansion of the first gas from volume v1 to volume v1 + v2, together with the work gained during the expansion of the second gas from v2 to v1 + v2, the expansions being supposed to be made into vacuum.

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Scientific Papers , pp. 242 - 249
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009
First published in: 1899

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