At sufficiently high temperatures, the thermal speeds of gas molecules may be high enough that collisions may ionize a molecule (that is, remove an outer electron). An ionized gas in which each molecule has lost an electron is called a “plasma.” Determine approximately the temperature at which air becomes a plasma.

Short Answer

Expert verified

The temperature at which the air becomes plasma is 1.7×105K.

Step by step solution

01

Defination of plasma.

The fourth state of the matter after solid liquid and Gas is the plasma state, in this state the atoms of the gas becomes Ionized and becomes an electrically conducting medium in which there are roughly equal numbers of positively and negatively chargedparticles.

02

Determination of the temperature at which air becomes plasma.

To determine the temperature at which the air becomes plasma, we have to use the ratio of energy and absolute temperature, therefore,

E=kT ….(i)

Here, K is the Boltzman constant and T is the temperature, and E is the energy,

It is known that the constituents of the air are mainly Nitrogen and Oxygen. Therefore, from the periodic table, we get the ionization energy of Nitrogen and Oxygen as,

Nitrogen has E=14.53eV.

Oxygen has E=13.62eV.

By converting the eV unit to an SI unit, solve as:

For Nitrogen:

E=14.53eV=14.53×1.6×10-19J=23.246×10-19J

For Oxygen:

E=13.62×1.6×10-19=21.648×10-19J

From equation (i), write the expression for:

T=Ek

Using the above equation solve as:

The temperature of nitrogen is as follows:

T=23.246×10-191.38×10-23=16.8×104K

The temperature of Oxygen is as follows:

T=21.648×10-191.38×10-23=15.7×104K

Therefore, to ionize the atmosphere, the temperature must reach a minimum 1.7×105K.

Unlock Step-by-Step Solutions & Ace Your Exams!

  • Full Textbook Solutions

    Get detailed explanations and key concepts

  • Unlimited Al creation

    Al flashcards, explanations, exams and more...

  • Ads-free access

    To over 500 millions flashcards

  • Money-back guarantee

    We refund you if you fail your exam.

Over 30 million students worldwide already upgrade their learning with Vaia!

One App. One Place for Learning.

All the tools & learning materials you need for study success - in one app.

Get started for free

Most popular questions from this chapter

Suppose that the entropy of a certain substance (not anEinstein solid) is given by S=aE, where ais a constant. Whatis the specific heat capacity Cas a function of the temperature T?

The reasoning developed for counting microstates applies to many other situations involving probability. For example, if you flip a coin 5 times, how many different sequences of 3 heads and 2 tails are possible? Answer: 10 different sequences, such as HTHHT or TTHHH. In contrast, how many different sequences of 5 heads and 0 tails are possible? Obviously only one, HHHHH, and our equation gives 5!/[5!0!]=1, using the standard definition that 0! is defined to equal 1.

If the coin is equally likely on a single throw to come up heads or tails, any specific sequence like HTHHT or HHHHH is equally likely. However, there is only one way to get HHHHH, while there are 10 ways to get 3 heads and 2 tails, so this is 10times more probable than getting all heads. Use the expression5!/[N!5-N!]to calculate the number of ways to get 0 heads, 1 head, 2 heads, 3 heads, 4 heads, or 5 heads in a sequence of 5 coin tosses. Make a graph of the number of ways vs. the number of heads.

The entropy S of a certain object (not an Einstein solid) is the following function of the internal energy E:S=bE1/2, where b is a constant. (a) Determine the internal energy of this object as a function of the temperature.

(b) What is the specific heat of this object as a function of the temperature?

You see a movie in which a shallow puddle of water coalesces into a perfectly cubical ice cube. How do you know the movie is being played backwards? Otherwise, what physical principle would be violated?

Suppose that the entropy of a certain substance (not anEinstein solid) is given byS=aE, where ais a constant. Whatis the energy Eas a function of the temperature T?

See all solutions

Recommended explanations on Physics Textbooks

View all explanations

What do you think about this solution?

We value your feedback to improve our textbook solutions.

Study anywhere. Anytime. Across all devices.

Sign-up for free