Kinetic diameter
Kinetic diameter is a measure applied to atoms and molecules that expresses the likelihood that a molecule in a gas will collide with another molecule. It is an indication of the size of the molecule as a target. The kinetic diameter is not the same as atomic diameter defined in terms of the size of the atom's electron shell, which is generally a lot smaller, depending on the exact definition used. Rather, it is the size of the sphere of influence that can lead to a scattering event.[1]
Kinetic diameter is related to the mean free path of molecules in a gas. Mean free path is the average distance that a particle will travel without collision. For a fast moving particle (that is, one moving much faster than the particles it is moving through) the kinetic diameter is given by,[2]
- where,
- d is the kinetic diameter,
- l is the mean free path, and
- n is the number density of particles
However, a more usual situation is that the colliding particle being considered is indistinguishable from the population of particles in general. Here, the Maxwell–Boltzmann distribution of energies must be considered, which leads to the modified expression,[3]
List of diameters
The following table lists the kinetic diameters of some common molecules;
Molecule | Molecular weight | Kinetic diameter picometers (pm) | ref | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Name | Formula | |||
Hydrogen | H2 | 2 | 289 | [2] |
Helium | He | 4 | 260 | [4] |
Methane | CH4 | 16 | 380 | [2] |
Water | H2O | 18 | 265 | [2] |
Nitrogen | N2 | 28 | 364 | [2] |
Carbon monoxide | CO | 28 | 376 | [4] |
Ethylene | C2H4 | 28 | 390 | [4] |
Oxygen | O2 | 32 | 346 | [2] |
Hydrogen sulfide | H2S | 34 | 360 | [4] |
Propylene | C3H6 | 42 | 450 | [4] |
Carbon dioxide | CO2 | 44 | 330 | [2] |
Propane | C3H8 | 44 | 430 | [4] |
Benzene | C6H6 | 78 | 585 | [5] |
Dissimilar particles
The colliding particle may be a different molecule to the molecules in the gas and hence will have a different kinetic diameter. This can occur, for instance, if a beam of fast particles is fired into the gas. The kinetic diameter defines an area, σ, called the scattering cross section. The scattering cross section in a collision is defined by the sum of the kinetic diameters of the two particles,
- where.
- r1, r2 are, respectively half the kinetic diameters, ie radii, of the two particles.
We define an intensive quantity, the scattering coefficient α, as the product of the gas number density and the scattering cross section,
The mean free path is the inverse of the scattering coefficient,
For similar particles, r1 = r2 and,
as before.[6]
References
Bibliography
- Freude, D., Molecular Physics, chapter 2, 2004 unpublished draft, retrieved and archived 18 October 2015.
- Ismail, Ahmad Fauzi; Khulbe, Kailash; Matsuura, Takeshi, Gas Separation Membranes: Polymeric and Inorganic, Springer, 2015 ISBN 3319010956.
- Joos, Georg; Freeman, Ira Maximilian, Theoretical Physics, Courier Corporation, 1958 ISBN 0486652270.
- Li, Jian-Min; Talu, Orhan, "Effect of structural heterogeneity on multicomponent adsorption: benzene and p-xylene mixture on silicalite", in Suzuki, Motoyuki (ed), Fundamentals of Adsorption, pp. 373-380, Elsevier, 1993 ISBN 0080887724.
- Matteucci, Scott; Yampolskii, Yuri; Freeman, Benny D.; Pinnau, Ingo, "Transport of gases and vapors in glassy and rubbery polymers" in, Yampolskii, Yuri; Freeman, Benny D.; Pinnau, Ingo, Materials Science of Membranes for Gas and Vapor Separation, pp. 1-47, John Wiley & Sons, 2006 ISBN 0470029048.