Chemistry, asked by simran7962, 1 year ago

Boyle's temperature and inversion temperature are related as​

Answers

Answered by 5queen36
10

Answer:

At the inversion temperature the coefficient changes its sign. For higher temperatures it is negative and the gas heats up due to expansion. For a temperature below the inversion temperature µJT is positive and the expanding gas cools down. ... Hence you can only operate at temperatures below the inversion temperature.

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Answered by hotelcalifornia
14

T_i =2T_b, where T_i is the inversion temperature and T_b is Boyle temperature.

Explanation:

  • Inversion temperature is double of Boyle's temperature. Boyle temperature is the temperature at which normal gases start to behave like ideal gases( due to the absence of both attractive and repulsive forces at that temperature).
  • Inversion Temperature is a pin-point temperature at which non-ideal gases, that are expanding at a constant enthalpy will have a temperature decrease and above it will have a temperature increase.
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