oszillodrom
Contributor
Coming from a (physical) chemistry background, the only law I use in diving is the ideal gas law, it has (almost) everything:
pV = nRT
where p is pressure; V is volume; n is moles and therefore directly proportional to the mass of gas; R is a constant; and T is temperature.
Edit:
To adress OP's problem, your result of 0.39 cf for the internal volume ('water volume') and 80 cf for the volume of uncompressed air are correct. When guesstimating the size of a tank, you mixed up your units.
Americans often give the capacity of a tank in volume of uncompressed air (which personally I consider very practical for SCUBA) while Europeans etc. will give you the 'water' volume in liters, so an Al80 tank roughly corresponds to an 11L or 12L tank in Europe or Asia.
pV = nRT
where p is pressure; V is volume; n is moles and therefore directly proportional to the mass of gas; R is a constant; and T is temperature.
Edit:
To adress OP's problem, your result of 0.39 cf for the internal volume ('water volume') and 80 cf for the volume of uncompressed air are correct. When guesstimating the size of a tank, you mixed up your units.
Americans often give the capacity of a tank in volume of uncompressed air (which personally I consider very practical for SCUBA) while Europeans etc. will give you the 'water' volume in liters, so an Al80 tank roughly corresponds to an 11L or 12L tank in Europe or Asia.