on August 9th, 2012

Dear Colleagues

An interesting little (simple) brain teaser for you – no matter whether what discipline or type of engineering professional you are.

The Challenge
A tank at atmospheric pressure contains 1 kg of air. The tank is then pressurized with an additional 3 kgs of air. What is the resultant gauge pressure (in bars) in the tank after this 3kgs of air has been added? Absolute pressure = gauge pressure + atmospheric pressure

A. 1 bar
B. 3 bar
C. 4 bar

You could use the Universal Gas Law in your deliberations:

PV = nRT

Where V is volume; P is absolute pressure; n is the number of moles (‘molecules’); R is a constant and T is the temperature.

Assume atmospheric pressure is 1 bar (the initial pressure) – naturally this is a number which could change depending on what altitude you are at.

Solution (suggested – you could do it in a myriad of different ways)
There is initially 1kg of air occupying V0 initial volume.

With 3kgs of air added; there is now a total of 4kg of air in the tank (thus the final number of moles or particles is effectively 4 times that of the initial number).

The volume (V0) and temperature (TO) of the tank still stays the same.

Thus:

P0 V0  = n0 R T0 (initial state)
P1  V0  =  n1 R T0  (final state where n1 = 4 x n0)
Thus – dividing each side of equation 1 and 2 we get:

P1  V0 / P0 V0  =  4 x n0 R T0  /  n0 R T0

P1  V0 / P0 V0  =  4 x n0 R T0  /  n0 R T0

Thus P1 = 4 P0

Hence, the final pressure P1 = 4 bar absolute or 3 bar gauge pressure (thus answer B above)

Do you agree?

My humble appreciation to Dr Rodney Jacobs and David Spitzer (the flow guru) for their contributions and critique.

Albert Einstein remarked: I never teach my pupils. I only attempt to provide the conditions in which they can learn.

Yours in engineering learning

Steve


      

The latest news

Simple Stress-Busters Every Engineer Can Use After a Long Day of Problem Solving

Simple Stress-Busters Every Engineer Can Use After a Long Day of Problem Solving

Long day buried in code, errors, or meetings that should’ve been emails? These five stress-busting strategies are practical, engineer-approved, and don’t involve chanting, incense, or pretending you enjoy yoga. You’ve...... Read more
Automation and AI in German Manufacturing and Lifelong Learning

Automation and AI in German Manufacturing and Lifelong Learning

Germany stands at the forefront of industrial automation, pioneering the use of AI, robotics, and advanced control systems. As the Fourth Industrial Revolution accelerates, the country’s skilled workforce must evolve...... Read more
6 “Rookie” Mistakes That Even Senior Engineers Make

6 “Rookie” Mistakes That Even Senior Engineers Make

Think rookie mistakes are only for interns and new grads? Think again. Even senior engineers, with all their experience and swagger, slip up in ways that are surprisingly common. These...... Read more
UK EIT | Engineering Institute of Technology