Tire Pressure Math

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Introduction

I woke up this morning to a rather brisk temperature of -23 °F (-31 °C). This is cold. At work, we had a short hallway discussion on the impact of temperature on tire pressure. I mentioned the following "rule of thumb" for tire pressure versus temperature (one of many sources):

Tire pressure decreases by 1 psi for each 10 °F decrease temperature.

This rule of thumb is easily derived and I thought I would put out a quick post on the subject. According to this rule, my tire pressure has dropped 6 psi since I filled my tires last week. The rule as stated assumes a nominal tire pressure of ~40 psi. You will see the rule changed to 2 psi for 10 °F of temperature change for a commercial truck tire, which are often inflated to 80 psi or more. As you will see below, the nominal tire pressure affects the amount of pressure variation with temperature.

Background

My derivation will be based on the ideal gas law. I will also make the following assumptions:

  • The ideal gas law is valid for air under pressure.

    The ideal gas law works well for low-pressure gases and gas mixtures, but it becomes less accurate as pressures increase. It turns out that at typical tire pressures, the error is less than 1% (see Appendix A).

  • The volume of the tire changes insignificantly with pressure.

    Tires are pretty stiff (e.g. they may have Kevlar or steel cords embedded in them). I know that severe under-inflation is obvious because the tire material is sagging. However, tires near full inflation vary little in volume as pressure changes.

Analysis

General Result

Given the assumptions above, we can derive an expression that states that the percentage change of air pressure in a tire is inversely proportional to the tire air temperature (Equation 1).

Eq. 1 \Delta p\%\triangleq \frac{\frac{dp}{dT}}{p(T)}=\frac{1}{T}

where

  • T is the absolute temperature of the tire air.
  • p(T) is the tire air pressure as a function of temperature.
  • \Delta p\% is the percentage tire pressure change with temperature.

We can derive Equation 1 as shown in Figure 1.

Figure 1: Derivation of Equation 1.

Figure 1: Derivation of Equation 1.

Ideal Gas Law Universal Gas Constant

Specific Example

Figure 2 shows how we can apply Equation 1 to a common tire pressure scenario to give us the rule of thumb. The tire pressure scenario is:

  • Tire air temperature of 20 °C (68 °F).
  • Sea level air pressure of 14. 7 psi.
  • Nominal tire pressure of 40 psi (gauge pressure)

I should note that Mathcad automatically converts the temperatures to an absolute scale (e.g. Kelvin). So when you see an expression like "(-20)°F", understand that this temperature is being converted into Kelvin.

Figure 2: Derivation of the Rule of Thumb for a Tire Pressure of 40 psi.

Figure 2: Derivation of the Rule of Thumb for a Tire Pressure of 40 psi.

We see in the example that the change in tire pressure with temperature is about 1 psi for every 10 °F change in temperature for a 40 psi tire pressure at 68 °F. In Figure 2, I look at two different air temperatures. You will notice that for a given tire pressure, the pressure change with temperature increases with lower reference temperature.

Figure 3 shows a graph of how the tire pressure (40 psi @ 68 °C) varies with temperature.

Figure 3: Tire Pressure Graph.

Figure 3: Tire Pressure Graph.

Conclusion

Straightforward application of the ideal gas law. Pretty simple post.

Appendix A: Compressibility Factor for Air

The compressibility factor for air is shown in Table 1 (Source). The compressibility factor is the ratio of the molar volume of a gas to the molar volume of an ideal gas at the same temperature and pressure. The compressibility factor can be used as a correction factor for the ideal gas law when applied to real gases.

As you can see from the table, the compressibility factor deviates from 1 by a fraction of a one percent even at 60 psi (~5 bar absolute). This means that using the ideal gas law will result in an error of less than 1%.

Table 1 : Air Compressibility Factor Table.

Pressure,
bar (absolute)

Temp,
K

1

5

10

20

40

60

80

75

0.0052

0.0260

0.0519

0.1036

0.2063

0.3082

0.4094

80

0.0250

0.0499

0.0995

0.1981

0.2958

0.3927

90

0.9764

0.0236

0.0453

0.0940

0.1866

0.2781

0.3686

100

0.9797

0.8872

0.0453

0.0900

0.1782

0.2635

0.3498

120

0.9880

0.9373

0.8860

0.6730

0.1778

0.2557

0.3371

140

0.9927

0.9614

0.9205

0.8297

0.5856

0.3313

0.3737

160

0.9951

0.9748

0.9489

0.8954

0.7803

0.6603

0.5696

180

0.9967

0.9832

0.9660

0.9314

0.8625

0.7977

0.7432

200

0.9978

0.9886

0.9767

0.9539

0.9100

0.8701

0.8374

250

0.9992

0.9957

0.9911

0.9822

0.9671

0.9549

0.9463

300

0.9999

0.9987

0.9974

0.9950

0.9917

0.9901

0.9903

350

1.0000

1.0002

1.0004

1.0014

1.0038

1.0075

1.0121

400

1.0002

1.0012

1.0025

1.0046

1.0100

1.0159

1.0229

450

1.0003

1.0016

1.0034

1.0063

1.0133

1.0210

1.0287

500

1.0003

1.0020

1.0034

1.0074

1.0151

1.0234

1.0323

600

1.0004

1.0022

1.0039

1.0081

1.0164

1.0253

1.0340

800

1.0004

1.0020

1.0038

1.0077

1.0157

1.0240

1.0321

1000

1.0004

1.0018

1.0037

1.0068

1.0142

1.0215

1.0290

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10 Responses to Tire Pressure Math

  1. Peter D says:

    I made a spreadsheet to play with the temperature and pressure, and it calculates it asuming no volume-change when other pressure , wich it will be for an already presurised tire.
    the website I filled in is my public map of skydrive that belongs to my hotmail adress, with lots of tire-pressure maps and files. In the motorhome tire pressure calculator map is the pressurecalculation with temp spreadsheet wich you first have to download to your computer by RIGHTCLICKING and then choose DOWNLOAD. Other means go wrong like leftclicking.
    After download open in Excell or Open office Calc on your computer .
    Would like further contact with you about the pressure calculation. can reach me at my hotmail.com adress with the username jadatis ( to prefent spamm like this) and I can sent you the copy of page 14 of standards manual of ETRTO in wich formula to calculate pressure for a sertain load, wich all the tyre makers use .

  2. john says:

    have you tried nitrogen filled tires on your vehicles yet? look for the green valve stem caps on vehicles.

    • mathscinotes says:

      I have heard people mention nitrogen for tires, but I have never seen it. I will ask some of our local motorheads about it.

      mathscinotes

    • Ray Sanderford says:

      Dry atmospheric air already contains 78% nitrogen so you would only gain another 22% if you inflated your tires with pure nitrogen, a very expensive way to inflate standard tires with no noticeable benefit.
      Professional race cars use it in tires specifically made for racing and are typically inflated to somewhere around 8psi...a horse of a different color from regular tires.

  3. Peter D says:

    Nitrogen filling does not influence the pressure/temperature relation.
    for every gas or combination of gasses that dont get liquid in the temperature range the tire is used expands the same with temperature chanching.
    So exeption to that can be water that can be liquid and gas shaped in the tire in the temperatures that can exist . Pure nitrogen contains no water by the proces of making it.

  4. Pingback: Why Bother with Nitrogen in Tires? | Math Encounters Blog

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  7. Devashish says:

    could you pls clarify the steps after taking natural log of all sides in ideal gas law

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