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Density of Air Equation

The density of air decreases with increasing altitude and temperature, and is approximately 1.2 kg/m3 at sea level and 20°C. Water vapor reduces the density of air since water molecules have a lower molecular mass than air. The density of air can be calculated based on factors like temperature, pressure, humidity, and altitude.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
116 views5 pages

Density of Air Equation

The density of air decreases with increasing altitude and temperature, and is approximately 1.2 kg/m3 at sea level and 20°C. Water vapor reduces the density of air since water molecules have a lower molecular mass than air. The density of air can be calculated based on factors like temperature, pressure, humidity, and altitude.

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aswar
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We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Density of air

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The density of air, (Greek: rho) (air density), is the mass per unit volume of Earth's
atmosphere, and is a useful value in aeronautics. As does air pressure, air density
decreases with increasing altitude and temperature. At sea level and at 20 C, dry air has a
density of approximately 1.2 kg/m3 (0.002377 slug/ft3).

The density of water, which is about 1000 kg/m3 (1 g/cm), is about 800 times more than
the density of air.

Contents
[hide]
1 Effects of temperature and pressure
2 Effect of water vapor
3 Effects of altitude
4 Importance of temperature
5 See also
6 References

7 External links

[edit] Effects of temperature and pressure


The formula for the density of dry air is given by:

where is the air density, p is pressure, R is the specific gas constant, and T is
temperature in kelvins.

The specific gas constant R for dry air is:

Therefore:
At standard temperature and pressure (0 C and 101.325 kPa), dry air has a
density of STP = 1.292 kg/m3.
At standard ambient temperature and pressure (25 C and 100 kPa), dry air has a
density of SATP = 1.168 kg/m3.
At standard ambient temperature and pressure (70 F and 14.696 psia), dry air has
a density of SATP = 0.075 lbm/ft3 ~ 1.2 kg/m3.

[edit] Effect of water vapor


The addition of water vapor to air (making the air humid) reduces the density of the air,
which may at first appear contrary to logic.

This occurs because the molecular mass of water (18) is less than the molecular mass of
air (around 29). For any gas, at a given temperature and pressure, the number of
molecules present is constant for a particular volume. So when water molecules (vapor)
are introduced to the air, the number of air molecules must reduce by the same number in
a given volume, without the pressure or temperature increasing. Hence the mass per unit
volume of the gas (its density) decreases.

The density of humid air may be calculated as a mixture of ideal gases. In this case, the
partial pressure of water vapor is known as the vapor pressure. Using this method, error
in the density calculation is less than 0.2% in the range of 10 C to 50 C. The density
of humid air is found by:

[1]

Where:

Density of the humid air (kg/m)


pd = Partial pressure of dry air (Pa)
Rd = Specific gas constant for dry air, 287.05 J/(kgK)
T = Temperature (K)
pv = Vapor pressure of water (Pa)
Rv = Specific gas constant for water vapor, 461.495 J/(kgK)

The vapor pressure of water may be calculated from the saturation vapor pressure and
relative humidity. It is found by:

Where:
pv = Vapor pressure of water

Relative humidity
psat = Saturation vapor pressure

The saturation vapor pressure of water at any given temperature is the vapor pressure
when relative humidity is 100%. A simplification of the regression [1] used to find this,
can be formulated as:

IMPORTANT:

This will give a result in mb, 1 mb=100 Pa

pd is found considering partial pressure, resulting in:

pd = p pv

Where p simply notes the absolute pressure in the observed system.

[edit] Effects of altitude


To calculate the density of air as a function of altitude, one requires additional
parameters. They are listed below, along with their values according to the International
Standard Atmosphere, using the universal gas constant instead of the specific one:

sea level standard atmospheric pressure p0 = 101325 Pa


sea level standard temperature T0 = 288.15 K
Earth-surface gravitational acceleration g = 9.80665 m/s2.
temperature lapse rate L = 0.0065 K/m
universal gas constant R = 8.31447 J/(molK)
molar mass of dry air M = 28.9644 g/mol = (0.0289644 kg/mol)

Temperature at altitude h meters above sea level is given by the following formula (only
valid inside the troposphere):

The pressure at altitude h is given by:


Density can then be calculated according to a molar form of the original formula:

[edit] Importance of temperature


The below table demonstrates that the properties of air change significantly with
temperature.

Table speed of sound in air c, density of air , acoustic impedance Z vs.


temperature C

Effect of temperature
C c in m/s in kg/m Z in Pas/m
10 325.2 1.342 436.1
5 328.3 1.317 432.0
0 331.3 1.292 428.4
+5 334.3 1.269 424.3
+10 337.3 1.247 420.6
+15 340.3 1.225 416.8
+20 343.2 1.204 413.2
+25 346.1 1.184 409.8
+30 349.0 1.165 406.3

[edit] See also


International Standard Atmosphere
U.S. Standard Atmosphere
NRLMSISE-00

[edit] References
1. ^ a b [1]

[edit] External links


Conversions of density units
Air density and density altitude calculations

Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Density_of_air"

Categories: Atmospheric thermodynamics | Density

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