Chemistry, asked by roonania, 4 months ago

Show and explain why the final volume in adiabatic expansion of an
ideal gas is smaller than the isothermal expansion for the same change in
pressure.​

Answers

Answered by ajaydhayal
2

Answer:

please mark me as brainliest

Explanation:

An ideal monatomic gas at 300 K expands adiabatically and reversibly to twice its volume. ... An adiabatic expansion has less work done and no heat flow, thereby a lower internal energy comparing to an isothermal expansion which has both heat flow and work done. Temperature decreases during adiabatic expansion.

Similar questions