2.5 Collisions and the mean free path

So far the molecules have been treated as a non-interacting swarm, colliding only with the walls. They also collide with each other, and the average distance a molecule travels between collisions — the mean free path — sets the scale on which a gas behaves as a continuum and controls how it transports momentum, heat, and matter (the subject of 2.6).

The collision length

ℓ = 1/(√2 n π d²) Derivation

Model each molecule as a hard sphere of diameter dd. Two molecules collide when their centres pass within dd, so a moving molecule sweeps out a collision cross-section σ=πd2\sigma = \pi d^2: any target whose centre lies in the cylinder of cross-section σ\sigma swept along the path is struck.

In travelling a distance LL the molecule sweeps a volume σL\sigma L and so meets nσLn\sigma L targets, where nn is the number density. The mean distance between collisions is the path length per collision,

  =  LnσL  =  1nπd2.\ell \;=\; \frac{L}{n\sigma L} \;=\; \frac{1}{n\,\pi d^2}.

This treats the targets as stationary. Accounting for their motion replaces the molecule’s speed by the relative speed of the colliding pair, which is larger by a factor 2\sqrt2 for a Maxwell–Boltzmann gas, shortening the path:

    =  12nπd2.  \boxed{\;\ell \;=\; \frac{1}{\sqrt2\, n\, \pi d^2}.\;}

The collision rate is then v/\langle v\rangle/\ell. For air at standard conditions (n2.5×1025m3n \approx 2.5\times10^{25}\,\text{m}^{-3}, d0.37nmd \approx 0.37\,\text{nm}) the mean free path is about 70nm70\,\text{nm} and the collision rate about 7×1097\times10^{9} per second — a molecule collides billions of times a second, which is why a gas reaches local equilibrium almost instantly and behaves as a smooth fluid on any human scale.

10-1110-1010-910-810-710-610-510-410-310-210-1100101102103length (m)molecular Åmolecular Ømean free path (air STP)1 μm1 mmspeaker baffle1 m (sound λ at 0.34 kHz)roomdλLKn = λ/L ≪ 1 — continuum hypothesis valid
n (m⁻³)1.00e+25
d (m)3.16e-10
λ = 1/(√2 n π d²)2.25e-7 m
L (system)1.00e-2 m
Kn = λ/L2.25e-5

Air at STP has n ≈ 2.5×10²⁵ m⁻³ and d ≈ 0.3 nm, giving λ ≈ 70 nm — much smaller than any acoustic system, so the continuum picture holds. Lower n (e.g. upper-atmosphere) or shrink L (e.g. MEMS) and Kn rises; once Kn ≳ 1 the gas is rarefied and the Navier-Stokes equation fails.

Slide the density and the molecular diameter and read off the mean free path together with the Knudsen number Kn=/L\mathrm{Kn} = \ell/L for a chosen system size LL.

When the continuum picture fails

The Knudsen number decides whether a gas is a continuum. When Kn1\mathrm{Kn} \ll 1 the mean free path is tiny compared with the system, collisions keep the gas locally equilibrated, and continuum equations (the Navier–Stokes equations of fluid mechanics, Fourier’s law of heat conduction) apply. When Kn\mathrm{Kn} approaches or exceeds 11 — rarefied upper-atmosphere flow, vacuum systems, gas in micron-scale channels — molecules cross the system between collisions, the continuum description breaks down, and the full kinetic theory of the Boltzmann transport equation is needed.