Nitrogen in tyres
Thought I'd start a new thread rather than clog the one this came from.

Originally Posted by
jrandom
Pure nitrogen apparently varies in density much less over typical tyre temperature ranges, making it well-suited to inflating tyres when cold and then keeping them at the correct pressure throughout a race meeting, etc.
As far as I know, anyway.
Here's one for the chemists out there.
The ideal gas equation is:
PV = nRT
where P=pressure, V=volume, N=number of moles of gas, R=universal gas constant and T=absolute temperature.
So, for an ideal gas kept at a constant volume (i.e. any gas in a tyre as all gases act pretty much like an ideal gas, so I'm told) as temperature rises so does pressure (at the same rate whatever the gas).
From this it should make no difference which gas is used in a tyre. Or does it? Are people mislead in thinking that Nitrogen expands less than air or am I missing something?
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