The Van der Waals equation is an equation of state for a fluid composed of particles that have a non-zero size and a pairwise attractive inter-particle force (such as the Van der Waals force.) It was derived by Johannes Diderik van der Waals in 1873, based on a modification of the ideal gas law. The equation accurately describes the behavior of real fluids; in particular, it exhibits a first-order phase transition between a liquid phase and a gaseous phase.
The Van der Waals equation is
Table of contents |
2 Liquid-gas phase transition 3 Reduced variables and universality 4 Fits to experimental data |
The derivation of the Van der Waals equation begins with the equation of state of an ideal gas, which is composed of non-interacting point particles:
Derivation of the equation
We now stop treating the fluid's constituent particles as point particles, instead modelling them as hard spheres with a small radius (the Van der Waals radius.) Denoting the volume of each sphere by b, we modify the equation of state to
Next, we introduce a pairwise attractive force between atoms. This causes the average free energy per particle to be reduced by an amount proportional to the fluid density. However, the pressure obeys the thermodynamic relation
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Liquid-gas phase transition