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Theoretical Question 2

(1) The buoyant force on a helium-filled balloon is derived as a function of the pressure inside and outside the balloon. (2) The temperature and pressure of air are expressed as functions of height, and the exponent relating pressure to height is derived. (3) The elastic energy of the inflated balloon is expressed in terms of its radius, and the change in pressure is sketched as a function of inflation ratio. (4) Parameters relating the amount of helium and initial inflation are used to determine a characteristic property of the balloon material. (5) For a balloon initially filled at sea level, the height at which buoyant force balances weight is calculated, along with the inflation ratio at that height.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
82 views

Theoretical Question 2

(1) The buoyant force on a helium-filled balloon is derived as a function of the pressure inside and outside the balloon. (2) The temperature and pressure of air are expressed as functions of height, and the exponent relating pressure to height is derived. (3) The elastic energy of the inflated balloon is expressed in terms of its radius, and the change in pressure is sketched as a function of inflation ratio. (4) Parameters relating the amount of helium and initial inflation are used to determine a characteristic property of the balloon material. (5) For a balloon initially filled at sea level, the height at which buoyant force balances weight is calculated, along with the inflation ratio at that height.

Uploaded by

Dan-Cristian
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Theoretical Question 2

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Theoretical Question 2

Rising Balloon
A rubber balloon filled with helium gas goes up high into the sky where the pressure and temperature decrease with height. In the following questions, assume that the shape of the balloon remains spherical regardless of the payload, and neglect the payload volume. Also assume that the temperature of the helium gas inside of the balloon is always the same as that of the ambient air, and treat all gases as ideal gases. The universal gas constant is R =8.31 J/molK and the molar masses of helium and air are M H = 4.00 10 3 kg/mol and M A = 28.9 10 3 kg/mol, respectively. The gravitational acceleration is g = 9.8 m/s2.

[Part A ] (a) [1.5 points] Let the pressure of the ambient air be P and the temperature be T . The pressure inside of the balloon is higher than that of outside due to the surface tension of the balloon. The balloon contains n moles of helium gas and the pressure inside is P + P . Find the buoyant force FB acting on the balloon as a function of P and P . (b) [2 points] On a particular summer day in Korea, the air temperature T at the height
z from the sea level was found to be T ( z ) = T0 (1 z / z0 ) in the range of 0 < z < 15

km with z0 =49 km and T0 =303 K. The pressure and density at the sea level were P0 = 1.0 atm = 1.01 10 5 Pa and 0 = 1.16 kg/m3, respectively. For this height range, the pressure takes the form
P ( z ) = P0 (1 z / z 0 ) .

(2.1)

Express in terms of z 0 , 0 , P0 , and g , and find its numerical value to the two significant digits. Treat the gravitational acceleration as a constant, independent of height.

Theoretical Question 2

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[Part B ] When a rubber balloon of spherical shape with un-stretched radius r0 is inflated to a sphere of radius r ( r0 ), the balloon surface contains extra elastic energy due to the stretching. In a simplistic theory, the elastic energy at constant temperature T can be expressed by
U = 4 r02RT (22 + 1 3)

(2.2)

where r / r0 ( 1) is the size-inflation ratio and is a constant in units of mol/m2. (c) [2 points] Express P in terms of parameters given in Eq. (2.2), and sketch P as a function of = r / r0 . (d) [1.5 points] The constant can be determined from the amount of the gas needed to inflate the balloon. At T0 =303 K and P0 =1.0 atm = 1.01 10 5 Pa, an un-stretched balloon ( = 1 ) contains n0 =12.5 moles of helium. It takes n =3.6 n0 =45 moles in total to inflate the balloon to =1.5 at the same T0 and P0 . Express the balloon parameter a , defined as a = / 0 , in terms of n , n0 , and , where 0 to the two significant digits. [Part C] A balloon is prepared as in (d) at the sea level (inflated to = 1.5 with n = 3.6n0 = 45 moles of helium gas at T0 =303 K and P0 =1 atm= 1.01 10 5 Pa). The total mass including gas, balloon itself, and other payloads is M T = 1.12 kg. Now let the balloon rise from the sea level. (e) [3 points] Suppose that the balloon eventually stops at the height z f where the buoyant force balances the total weight. Find z f and the inflation ratio f at that
r0 P0 . Evaluate a 4RT0

Theoretical Question 2

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height. Give the answers in two significant digits. Assume there are no drift effect and no gas leakage during the upward flight.

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