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How do real gases deviate from ideal behavior?

Real gases deviate from ideal behavior mainly because the assumptions of the ideal gas law don’t perfectly apply to them. Here’s why and how:

  1. Intermolecular forces exist
    • Ideal gases assume no attraction or repulsion between particles.
    • In real gases, particles attract each other slightly, especially at low temperatures. This makes the gas less “spread out” than predicted, so it behaves differently from an ideal gas.
  2. Finite particle volume
    • Ideal gases assume gas particles have negligible size.
    • Real gas molecules take up space, so at high pressures (when particles are close together), the volume of the gas is larger than predicted by the ideal gas law.
  3. Low temperature and high pressure effects
    • At low temperatures, particles move slower, so attractions become more significant, and the gas can even condense into a liquid.
    • At high pressures, particles are forced close together, making their volume and interactions important, causing deviations from ideal behavior.

In short: Real gases deviate from ideal behavior mainly at high pressure and low temperature, due to intermolecular forces and finite molecular size.

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