Forces of attraction and repulsion of gas molecules in a Stirling engine.

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Tom Booth
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Forces of attraction and repulsion of gas molecules in a Stirling engine.

Post by Tom Booth »

Some time back I requested any references in support of the repeated assertion that molecules in gaseous form are NEVER attracted to each other anywhere above the liquefaction point.

Bellow is just a potion of my response to one post where this assertion was made.

There has been no response to my request for any citation or reference.

Nevertheless, I did say; "Perhaps you could cite some credible sources to that effect, (in reference to REAL rather than "Ideal" gases), because I believe I can easily site several seemingly credible sources that say exactly what I have stated."

As this seems to be an ongoing and as yet unresolved issue, I would like to go ahead and provide my own references in support of my contention that gas molecules do infact attract each other and that this attraction does have a significant influence on the operation of a Stirling engine.
Tom Booth wrote: Fri Aug 25, 2023 12:07 pm
Fool wrote: Fri Aug 25, 2023 1:42 am ...
Tom Booth wrote:
"Real gases are always influenced by forces of molecular attraction and repulsion."
No. Not above the liquid/vapor temperature and below the critical pressure. They act like gases, always with positive pressures. And temperatures for that matter.

...
Perhaps you could cite some credible sources to that effect, (in reference to REAL rather than "Ideal" gases), because I believe I can easily site several seemingly credible sources that say exactly what I have stated.

The attractive forces of atoms and molecules come into play whenever those atoms or molecules are in close enough proximity, and I would venture a guess that in a closed sealed chamber such as a Stirling engine, the gas molecules are always in close enough proximity to influence each other, especially when compressed at all above 1atm. Above 1 ATM gases generally no longer behave "ideally".
(...)
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Re: Forces of attraction and repulsion of gas molecules in a Stirling engine.

Post by Fool »

Since I have no clue as to what sources you would accept as "credible", and I've posted several that prove nothing more than someone else's hearsay, it is pointless for me to Google bash for you. Please do your own research. Try not to just look for verification of your point.

Logically, if you completely fill a cylinder with a liquid, at any temperature and expand that volume so is larger than the volume of liquid you will have a volume above the liquid and a volume of that liquid. This expansion can be done by either a piston, or a very long vertical tube where the weight of the liquid pulls a void against the ambient, atmospheric or buffer pressure.

Now you must ask yourself, what is in the volume above the liquid?

1: Perfect vacuum? Nope.
2: Partial vacuum? Yes.

Since it is only a partial vacuum that leaves a partial pressure behind that is higher than zero pressure. Zero pressure would be a prefect vacuum. That is called the vapor pressure of a liquid at a specific temperature. It gets higher as the temperature gets higher.

Your question here seems to imply that even in that partial pressure molecules attract each other, and they do, somewhat.

Two molecules approaching each other slowly enough will connect into a two molecule liquid. Their attraction will bind them until being knocked loose by another faster moving molecule. At higher temperatures, especially above the critical temperature, this knocking loose happens to a greater extent.

One more thing occurred to me, it's usually a bad idea to mix microscopic properties with macroscopic properties. Molecular attraction is a microscopic property. Pressure is a macroscopic/bulk property. Yes microscopic properties lead to the bulk properties, but leaving even one out, like kinetic energy, can lead to errors. Kinetic energy is what produces the pressure and is part of internal energy.
ST_diagram_of_N2_01.jpg
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That diagram shows that even at very low temperatures there is always a positive pressure, lower right corner. Meaning gas phase "vapor pressure" above any liquid. Compressing that gas requires work and produces temperature rise, also called an increase in internal energy. Or as Matt Brown would call it, "back work". It is the reason why thermodynamically 100% efficiency is not realizable. A Stirling engine doesn't operate in the low pressure right corner. They operate in the middle around 1 to 100 bars and 300 to 1000 K. Plenty of pressure to compress and have a temperature rise.

Do molecules have both repulsion and attraction? Yes. Do they also have kinetic energy? Yes. Does the kinetic energy provide the pressure phenomenon? Yes. Is there an area where the ideal gas law is accurate? Yes. Do we need to use the ideal gas law? No, we have real indicator PV diagrams that show how the real engine with real gas works.

Trust those diagrams, to a point. Add more pressure sensors and diagrams. Verify, verify, verify. Doctor use twelve leads just to measure heart electrical signals.

Some other links you may want to visit:

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Real_gas

Look in the models section.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Critica ... odynamics)

From that last link:

660px-Phase-diag2.svg.png
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It is well within that lower right hand area, Gaseous Phase, where real gases can be modeled as an ideal gas, sorta kinda. It is above critical temperature and below critical pressure. It is still best to use tables, phase diagrams, and indicator diagrams of real gases and engines.
Tom Booth
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Re: Forces of attraction and repulsion of gas molecules in a Stirling engine.

Post by Tom Booth »

Fool wrote: Mon Aug 28, 2023 5:42 am
(..)Try not to just look for verification of your point.
You've thrown a lot of stuff against the wall. Not sure what point(s) if any you are trying to make with any of that.

My "point" is simply the observable, measurable, verifiable FACTS that:

1) In a thermal lag or thermoacoustic type Stirling engine in particular as well as other types (to be determined, Andrew Hall demonstrated several) possibly others, the piston can return fully to TDC with no involvement from stored energy in a flywheel, and no apparent means for any RAPID external cooling.

Certainly anyone can imagine that the engine is SOMEHOW "rejecting" relatively enormous amounts of heat instantaneously across a highly insulative barrier by some kind of magic, or just because 200 years ago some natural philosopher considered it necessary, and that's fine. Think whatever you like.

My assumption, for whomever may be interested is simple.

As the gas does it's expansion work driving the engine, between TDC and BDC it ends up in a low energy state which results in a temperature drop and low pressure.

The low pressure pretty obviously must have something to do with an increase in molecular attraction and/or decrease in molecular repulsion of the "working fluid".

This drop in pressure is rather dramatic in that it allows the piston to return, in a thermal lag type engine, even when heat is still being continuously applied and this heat is not blocked by any displacer, as such engines have no displacer.

There are innumerable sources I could cite immediately that confirm attractive forces between molecules actually exist and have an influence.

That has always been good enough for me. The number and complexity of molecular forces that could potentially be involved is a bit overwhelming, so I'm pretty content with the experimental observations, I don't really need to know the details.

However, now I'm taking some time to research the question a little more in depth.

Something I'm finding of considerable interest at the moment is dipole or dipole-dipole attraction type forces which are apparently capable of causing a cascading effect.

That is, dipole-dipole molecules may confer polarizing attractive force to neighboring molecules which would not normally be attracted. Non-dipole molecules may also become temporarily attracted when they come close together and cause a temporary "distortion" or their electron fields or some such thing.

Water vapor is highly suspect as a contributing factor.

Whan I come across anything that seems particularly relevant or especially significant I'll post it here, but it is bound to be a slow process.

In the mean time I found this video particularly interesting, mostly just as a general introduction to the subject.


https://youtu.be/sTufBlv9e20?si=40qkFd-6m2CHdTZz
Fool
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Re: Forces of attraction and repulsion of gas molecules in a Stirling engine.

Post by Fool »

Tom,

"the piston can return fully to TDC with no involvement from stored energy in a flywheel, and no apparent means for any RAPID external cooling."

Another interesting question is: If a volume of gas in a cylinder is heated by a temperature difference the entire length and time it is being expanded, will it stop expanding merely from external atmospheric pressure without a flywheel, crank, connecting rod, or even piston?

The answer is: Yes. The pressure at any temperature, will decrease until at or below atmospheric pressure at which point atmospheric pressure will slow, stop, and reverse the expansion motion.
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Re: Forces of attraction and repulsion of gas molecules in a Stirling engine.

Post by Tom Booth »

Fool wrote: Fri Sep 01, 2023 2:53 am Tom,

"the piston can return fully to TDC with no involvement from stored energy in a flywheel, and no apparent means for any RAPID external cooling."

Another interesting question is: If a volume of gas in a cylinder is heated by a temperature difference the entire length and time it is being expanded, will it stop expanding merely from external atmospheric pressure without a flywheel, crank, connecting rod, or even piston?

The answer is: Yes. The pressure at any temperature, will decrease until at or below atmospheric pressure at which point atmospheric pressure will slow, stop, and reverse the expansion motion.
Have you ever actually seen this or tried it?

Generally speaking, this can be observed (with the piston in the cylinder) whenever a Stirling engine is started.

The gas very gradually expands and the piston is pushed out very slowly.

Eventually, the piston will stop, due to friction, or reaching the end of its stroke and the gas will continue to expand and "leak" past the piston, or the piston will extend so far that the gas at the extreme end of the power cylinder cools from the cylinder walls as much as it is being heated at the other end and the piston stops.

The piston stops.

No, it does not return. Not unless the heat is removed so the gas can gradually cool. Or, the engine is started by QUICKLY (adiabatically) applying some external force to alter the energy balance.

Without a piston, in some engines, I think the gas may begin to oscillate spontaneously, very gradually at first, but this is rare, and I suspect some initial impulse comes from some cooling draft or vibration or possibly even "Brownian motion" since the oscillations are at first microscopic.

Honestly though "fool" I have better things to do, but if you are going to insist on following me around making false and misleading assertions I feel obligated to respond. I don't particularly want one of the threads I've started full of false and misleading statements, but I don't particularly want them filled with reams of tiresome nonsense either.
Tom Booth
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Re: Forces of attraction and repulsion of gas molecules in a Stirling engine.

Post by Tom Booth »

I thought this was interesting in this context:

https://youtu.be/e-7DFp_B0y4?si=BEzU7LUQcHL_INIG


The metal refrigerator magnet paper clamp thing weighed in at 30 grams

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Tom Booth
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Re: Forces of attraction and repulsion of gas molecules in a Stirling engine.

Post by Tom Booth »

Some additional interesting videos on this topic:

A few points of interest.

The repulsive forces between gas molecules is very VERY close range, apparently limited to when the electron clods surrounding the nuclei overlap.

The repulsive force falls away or weakens rapidly with distance.

At close range the attractive forces is weaker but is much longer range so as soon as the repulsive forces weakens with distance the attractive force becomes dominant.

So, the generally dominant force is the attractive force between gas molecules until the molecules essentially collide and their electron orbits overlap. They attract, but cannot occupy the same space.

https://youtu.be/QWF0ES9Mo_Y

Some info on the role of molecular attraction and repulsion in regard to the joule-Thomson effect:

https://youtu.be/glXU3z1yRTk

He doesn't go very far into it but I've read this explanation before and it makes sense.

When a gas expands enough to work in opposition to the attractive force it cools.

On the other hand, gases with stronger repulsive forces like helium increase in KE while expanding.

Naturally, the attractive and repulsive forces tend towards a state of equilibrium:


https://youtu.be/Yqj5jHUE3wI
Fool
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Re: Forces of attraction and repulsion of gas molecules in a Stirling engine.

Post by Fool »

.

One mole of any gas at STP fills 22.4 liters.

How does your molecular attraction, repulsion, size, and lack of bouncing, theory account for that fact. It doesn't.

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Re: Forces of attraction and repulsion of gas molecules in a Stirling engine.

Post by Tom Booth »

Fool wrote: Wed Oct 30, 2024 9:10 pm .

One mole of any gas at STP fills 22.4 liters.

How does your molecular attraction, repulsion, size, and lack of bouncing, theory account for that fact. It doesn't.

.
What do you think a mole of gas consists of moron?

How many molecules?

A mole of gas (at STP) would just about fit in a 5 gallon pail:

Compress_20241031_022432_2015.jpg
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Now you need to pack about 600 sextillion gas molecules in that little girls bucket.

Of course, if you just lower the temperature down such as in a Stirling engine running with liquid nitrogen you can get that 5 gallons of air to contract down to almost nothing.

So what does 600 sextillion look like?

600,000,000,000,000,000,000,000

That bucket is pretty tightly packed with air molecules if you ask me.

Not much wiggle room.
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Re: Forces of attraction and repulsion of gas molecules in a Stirling engine.

Post by Tom Booth »

What is interesting in the above video is this diagram showing how when gas molecules behave "ideally', that is, not interacting, neither attracting nor repelling, it is not because the forces of attraction and repulsion do not exist, not at all. Infact, they are at their strongest in some ways but balanced.
Screenshot_20241030-221237.jpg
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As long as the molecules maintain that distance the forces of attraction and repulsion cancel our to an apparent zero.

But,....

Start manipulating the gas by mechanical compression or expansion and the balance is offset from equilibrium. The gas will naturally try to return to a balance, back to a state of equilibrium.

When you have billions or trillions of molecules being expanded or compressed together simultaneously in an engine you get a pretty powerful oscillation I think.

The kinetic theory is a mathematical model that "assumes" no molecular interaction at all. No attractive forces, no repulsive forces, free floating point size dimensionless particles. That only works at equilibrium when the attractive and repulsive forces are in perfect balance and so cancel each other out and SEEM to not exist, but that is not reality.
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Re: Forces of attraction and repulsion of gas molecules in a Stirling engine.

Post by Fool »

.
Tom Booth wrote:That bucket is pretty tightly packed with air molecules if you ask me.

Not much wiggle room.
There is plenty of free mean path room. Your ignorance and rage are blinding you. Calm down and read up some on the three phases of matter. Solid, liquid, and gas. Gas always pushes, never pulls.

You really need to read up and understand escape velocity. You need to understand that the direction of velocity doesn't matter. If it is towards another molecule, it is sped up by the attractive force, the extra speed/momentum is used to tear the attraction apart, slowing the molecules back to the origin escape velocity speed/temperature. Escape velocity changes with distance, slower a greater distances.

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Re: Forces of attraction and repulsion of gas molecules in a Stirling engine.

Post by Tom Booth »

Fool wrote: Thu Oct 31, 2024 9:51 am .
Tom Booth wrote:That bucket is pretty tightly packed with air molecules if you ask me.

Not much wiggle room.
There is plenty of free mean path room. Your ignorance and rage are blinding you. Calm down and read up some on the three phases of matter. Solid, liquid, and gas. Gas always pushes, never pulls.

You really need to read up and understand escape velocity. You need to understand that the direction of velocity doesn't matter. If it is towards another molecule, it is sped up by the attractive force, the extra speed/momentum is used to tear the attraction apart, slowing the molecules back to the origin escape velocity speed/temperature. Escape velocity changes with distance, slower a greater distances.

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Well, Your an idiot.

Those videos have apparently made no impression on you at all, more than likely you didn't even watch them.

It is unfortunate information of that kind provided in those videos is not more readily available instead of the outdated, obsolete nonsense they still teach in school but which will all need to be unlearned and forgotten by anyone wanting to do any real work or make any progress in this area of Stirling engine development.

Why don't you address the topic of the Lennar Jones potential as it relates to gas behavior on the molecular level?

All you do is keep repeating the same mantra "Gas always pushes, never pulls" like some kind of record player.

Get lost. Some of us here are actually interested in working with and improving Stirling engines. You're nothing but a troll.
Fool
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Re: Forces of attraction and repulsion of gas molecules in a Stirling engine.

Post by Fool »

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Tom Booth wrote:All you do is keep repeating the same mantra "Gas always pushes, never pulls" like some kind of record player.
Because you still haven't provided any opposing evidence. And you apparently have not yet understood why the evidence supports it. Your rage has blinded you. Your rage is so bad you have resorted to the logical error of banter and vituperation.

The three most recent videos contained only things I already know. The second has some grievous errors, such as, 'an atom is a spinning magnet'. And didn't even touch on Joule-Thomson.

The Lennar Jones Potential, as one of my many professors explain it, is for liquid and solid phases. Gaseous behavior is in the range very far to the right on that chart. So far that your three videos didn't even touch on the subject. It explains why liquids and solids expand when heated.

The first difference that a gas has from a solid or liquid is that gasses always push, never pull. It isn't worth going on with your education until you understand why that is true, and backed up by over 200 years of data and theory.

Look up what escape velocity is in orbital mechanics and how it behaves and works.



Tom Booth wrote:Well, Your [Sic] an idiot.


That is totally unacceptable behavior. You know so little about the science here that I doubt there is any teacher capable of teaching you what you have to know to understand thermodynamics. I keep trying, but it is becoming apparent that you refuse to put any effort to learn this stuff. All you are doing is attempting to cherry pick YouTube to confuse people with things you know nothing about.

Further more, the word is 'you'er' not "your". As in you are an idiot. Or, You're an idiot.

'Your', is possessive as in, I'm your idiot. You're is a contraction of 'you are'. It means that a description follows, as in you are an idiot. Got it? Spelling it incorrectly, as you have frequently done, just shows your maturity and ignorance. Sorry. It's a pity.



Tom Booth wrote:Some of us here are actually interested in working with and improving Stirling engines.


What have I done to suppress it? Certainly explaining classical thermodynamics correctly, can only help. You and your banter an vituperation, certainly hurts, is trollish, and is immature to boot. Grow up.


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Re: Forces of attraction and repulsion of gas molecules in a Stirling engine.

Post by Fool »

.

Shows your Immaturity...
Tom Booth
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Re: Forces of attraction and repulsion of gas molecules in a Stirling engine.

Post by Tom Booth »

Fool wrote: Thu Oct 31, 2024 9:29 pm .
....

The Lennar Jones Potential, as one of my many professors explain it, is for liquid and solid phases. Gaseous behavior is in the range very far to the right on that chart. So far that your three videos didn't even touch on the subject. It explains why liquids and solids expand when heated.

The first difference that a gas has from a solid or liquid is that gasses always push, never pull....
You either didn't actually watch the videos, didn't understand them, or are a really bad liar.

The first video in particular was all about "real" gas behavior. It was stated about the Lennard Jones potential that it was how Van der Walls forces originated and towards the end states quite plainly that Lennard Jones applies to ALL phases of matter. The entire video is a graphic depiction of gas behavior.

4:24-4:40

https://youtu.be/QWF0ES9Mo_Y

10:49

"Lennard Jones potential describes particles generally GAS, liquids or solids"

Your living in an outdated dream world.
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