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When they say in the United States that a car’s tire is filled “to 32 lb,”​ they mean that

its internal pressure is 32 lbf/in² above the ambient atmosphere. If the tire is at sea level,
has a volume of 3.0 ft³, and is at 75°F. Estimate the total weight of air, in lbf, inside the tire

User Nick Vasic
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1 Answer

4 votes

Answer:

0.71 lbf

Step-by-step explanation:

Use ideal gas law:

PV = nRT

where P is absolute pressure,

V is volume,

n is number of moles,

R is universal gas constant,

and T is absolute temperature.

The absolute pressure is the sum of the atmospheric pressure and the gauge pressure.

P = 32 lbf/in² + 14.7 lbf/in²

P = 46.7 lbf/in²

Absolute temperature is in Kelvin or Rankine:

T = 75 + 459.67 R

T = 534.67 R

Given V = 3.0 ft³, and R = 10.731 ft³ psi / R / lb-mol:

PV = nRT

(46.7 lbf/in²) (3.0 ft³) = n (10.731 ft³ psi / R / lb-mol) (534.67 R)

n = 0.02442 lb-mol

The molar mass of air is 29 lbm/lb-mol, so the mass is:

m = (0.02442 lb-mol) (29 lbm/lb-mol)

m = 0.708 lbm

The weight of 1 lbm is lbf.

W = 0.708 lbf

Rounded to two significant figures, the weight of the air is 0.71 lbf.

User Nebojsa Susic
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