Calculator Inputs
Enter measured gas-state values to calculate compressibility factor, then add optional real-gas details for deeper comparison.
Example Data Table
These values are illustrative examples for testing the calculator interface and output style.
| Gas | Pressure | Volume | Temperature | Moles | Approx. Z |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nitrogen | 10 bar | 9.85 L | 300 K | 4 mol | 0.987 |
| Carbon dioxide | 25 bar | 4.10 L | 300 K | 4 mol | 1.027 |
| Methane | 80 bar | 3.40 L | 320 K | 10 mol | 1.022 |
| Helium | 5 bar | 24.90 L | 300 K | 5 mol | 0.998 |
Formula Used
Primary compressibility equation
Z = PV / nRT
Here, P is absolute pressure, V is gas volume, n is amount of gas, R is the universal gas constant, and T is absolute temperature.
Ideal-gas comparison values
Videal = nRT / P
Pideal = nRT / V
These values show what pressure or volume the sample would have if it behaved ideally under the same state conditions.
Helpful derived properties
Vm = V / n
ρ = nM / V
Molar volume reveals space per mole, while density is computed only if molar mass is provided.
Reduced properties
Pr = P / Pc
Tr = T / Tc
Optional van der Waals comparison
P = RT / (Vm - b) - a / Vm2
If constants a and b are entered, the page compares your measured state with a basic real-gas equation-of-state estimate.
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter pressure, volume, temperature, and gas amount.
- Select the correct units for each required field.
- Optionally enter molar mass to calculate sample density.
- Optionally enter critical properties for reduced values.
- Optionally enter van der Waals constants for comparison.
- Press the calculate button to show results above the form.
- Review the graph, ideal comparisons, and interpretation message.
- Use the CSV or PDF buttons to save your output.
FAQs
1) What does the compressibility factor mean?
It measures how far a gas departs from ideal-gas behavior. A value of 1 means ideal behavior, below 1 suggests attractive forces dominate, and above 1 suggests repulsive or finite-volume effects are more important.
2) Why must temperature be converted to kelvin?
The compressibility equation uses absolute temperature. Kelvin starts at absolute zero, so it preserves the correct thermodynamic relationship between pressure, volume, and amount of gas during the calculation.
3) Does this calculator require absolute pressure?
Yes. Compressibility calculations should use absolute pressure. If your instrument reads gauge pressure, convert it to absolute pressure first by adding the local atmospheric pressure before using the calculator.
4) What does a Z value below 1 imply?
It usually means intermolecular attractions are reducing the measured pressure-volume product relative to ideal-gas expectations. Many gases show this behavior at moderate pressures and temperatures not far above condensation conditions.
5) What does a Z value above 1 imply?
It usually indicates repulsive interactions or excluded-volume effects dominate. This commonly appears at higher pressures, where molecules occupy significant space and resist compression more than an ideal gas would.
6) When should I enter critical properties?
Add critical pressure and critical temperature when you want reduced properties. Reduced values help compare gases on a normalized basis and are useful when checking generalized compressibility behavior.
7) Why are van der Waals constants optional?
The main calculator only needs measured state data. Constants a and b are optional because they provide an extra model-based comparison, not a requirement for directly computing compressibility factor from measurements.
8) What does the graph show?
The graph shows how Z changes as pressure varies while your entered volume, temperature, and gas amount stay fixed. It gives a quick visual sense of sensitivity around the chosen operating point.