In continuum mechanics, an equation of state suitable for modeling solids is naturally rather different from the ideal gas law. A solid has a certain equilibrium volume V0, and the energy increases quadratically as volume is increased or decreased a small amount from that value. The simplest plausible dependence of energy on volume would be a harmonic solid, with
The next simplest reasonable model would be with a constant bulk modulus
Murnaghan equation of state
A more sophisticated equation of state was derived by Francis D. Murnaghan of Johns Hopkins University in 1944
. To begin with, we consider the pressureand the bulk modulus
Experimentally, the bulk modulus pressure derivative
is found to change little with pressure. If we take B' = B'0 to be a constant, then
- B = B0 + B'0P(4)
where B0 is the value of B when P = 0. We may equate this with (2) and rearrange as
Integrating this results in
or equivalently
Substituting (6) into then results in the equation of state for energy.
Many substances have a fairly constant B'0 of about 3.5.
Birch–Murnaghan equation of state
The third-order Birch–Murnaghan isothermal equation of state, published in 1947 by Francis Birch of Harvard
, is given by:Again, E(V) is found by integration of the pressure:
References
- ^ F.D. Murnaghan, 'The Compressibility of Media under Extreme Pressures', in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, vol. 30, pp. 244-247, 1944.
- ^ Francis Birch, 'Finite Elastic Strain of Cubic Crystals', in Physical Review, vol. 71, pp. 809-824 (1947).
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