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What are real-world applications of ideal and non-ideal gas behavior?

Applications of Ideal Gas Behavior

Ideal gas laws (PV = nRT) work well when gases are at low pressure and high temperature, where intermolecular forces are negligible.

  1. Calculating gas volumes in chemical reactions
    • In industries, the amount of oxygen, hydrogen, or nitrogen needed for reactions is estimated using the ideal gas equation.
    • Example: Determining how much hydrogen is needed to produce ammonia in the Haber process.
  2. Respiratory physiology
    • Doctors use the ideal gas law to estimate how much oxygen is needed in ventilators or anesthesia delivery.
  3. Scuba diving tanks
    • The gas inside tanks at room temperature behaves nearly ideally, so calculations for pressure and volume are straightforward.
  4. Aerosol sprays
    • Propellant gases in deodorants or sprays expand ideally when released into the atmosphere.

Applications of Non-Ideal Gas Behavior

Non-ideal behavior appears at high pressures and low temperatures, where intermolecular forces and molecular sizes matter.

  1. Liquefied gases (LPG, LNG, oxygen, nitrogen)
    • To convert gases into liquids, real gas behavior must be considered. The van der Waals equation is used to account for attractions and repulsions.
  2. Refrigeration and air conditioning
    • Refrigerants (like Freon, ammonia, CO₂) deviate from ideal behavior when compressed and cooled. Engineers must use real gas equations to design efficient systems.
  3. Rocket propulsion
    • Combustion gases inside rocket engines are at extremely high pressures and temperatures, so corrections to the ideal gas law are needed for accurate thrust calculations.
  4. Petrochemical industry
    • Storage and transport of gases like methane, propane, or butane require real gas models, since these gases deviate significantly from ideal behavior at storage conditions.
  5. High-altitude science
    • At very low pressures (like in the upper atmosphere), gases deviate from ideal assumptions, affecting weather balloon calculations and atmospheric modeling.

In simple words:

  • Ideal gas law is used when gases behave “perfectly” (everyday calculations, low pressure, high temp).
  • Non-ideal gas laws are needed in real engineering and industrial processes where gases are compressed, cooled, or liquefied.

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