Definition of Terms: The Amount of A Substance Occupying A Particular Volume

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DEFINITION OF TERMS

 THE AMOUNT OF A SUBSTANCE OCCUPYING A


PARTICULAR VOLUME

 THE ACTION OF PRESSING OR PUSHING AGAINST


SOMETHING

 STATES THAT PRESSURE IS INVERSELY PROPORTIONAL


TO VOLUME
OBJECTIVES
 Define BOYLE’S LAW;

 Understand the concept of BOYLE’S LAW;

 Solve word problem related to BOYLE’S LAW;

 Cite an examples giving the importance of BOYLE’S


LAW in the real-life situation.
Boyle’s
Law
INSTRUCTION:
1. Fit inside the syringe the balloon and move about
freely ( if needed).

2. Place your thumb over the nozzle of the syringe to


make an airtight seal.

3. Compress the syringe then observe what happen to the


balloon.

4. Pull the plunger of syringe back then observe what


happen to the balloon.
What is Boyle’s Law?
• Boyle’s Law is one of the laws in physics that
concern the behaviour of gases
• When a gas is under pressure it takes up less
space:
• The higher the pressure, the smaller the volume
• Boyles Law tells us about the relationship
between the volume of a gas and its pressure at
a constant temperature
• The law states that pressure is inversely
proportional to the volume
How can we write Boyle’s Law as a
formula?
• Pressure is inversely • This is more usually
proportional to the written as:
volume and can be
written as:
• Pressure  1/volume • Pressure = constant
volume
P=pressure in N/m2 • PV=k
V=volume in dm3 (litres) • P1V1=P2V2
k=constant
How can we investigate Boyle’s Law?
• When investigating Boyles law a given volume of
gas is sucked into a cylinder and the end is
sealed
• The temperature of the gas is kept constant
• Using several equal weights we can apply
increasing pressure to the gas
• We can calculate the pressure by dividing the
force applied by the area of the top of the
cylinder
• The volume will be shown on the scale on the
cylinder
Boyle’s Law apparatus
Below are some results of an experiment
Pressure p Volume V PxV

1.1 40 44

1.7 26

2.2 20

2.6 17

• Calculate pV (pressure x volume) for each set of results.


What do you notice?
What these experimental results show

• The pressure x volume for each set of


results remains constant
• This is called Boyle’s Law
• For a fixed mass of gas, at constant
temperature, pV = constant or
P1 x V 1 = P 2 x V 2
• Let us look at the results again
Here are the results of the experiment
Pressure p Volume V PxV

1.1 40 44

1.7 26 44

2.2 20 44

2.6 17 44

• Did you notice that if p is doubled, V is halved?


• If p increases to 3 times as much, V decreases to a 1/3 rd . This
means:
• Volume is inversely proportional to pressure, or
V1
p
What sort of graphs would this
data give?
• If we plot volume directly against pressure
we would get a downwards curve showing
that volume gets smaller as the pressure
gets larger, and vice versa.
Another way of plotting the data
• Curved lines are hard to recognise, so we
plot the volume against the reciprocal of
pressure (ie. 1/p)
• This time the points lie close to a straight
line through the origin.
• This means volume is directly proportional to
1/pressure or
• volume is inversely proportional to pressure
This leads us back to Boyle’s
Law
Boyle’s Law: for a fixed mass of
gas kept at constant temperature
the volume of the gas is inversely
proportional to its pressure.
Problem:
• A deep sea diver is
working at a depth
where the pressure is
3.0 atmospheres. He is
breathing out air
bubbles. The volume of
each air bubble is 2
cm2. At the surface the
pressure is 1
atmosphere. What is
the volume of each
bubble when it reaches
the surface?
How we work this out:
• We assume that the temperature is constant, so
Boyle’s Law applies:
• Formula first: P1 x V1 = P2 x V2

• Then numbers:= 1.0 x 2 = 3.0 x V2


• Now rearrange the numbers so that you have V2
on one side, and the rest of the numbers on the
other side of the ‘equals’ symbol.
Here’s what you should have calculated

V2 = 3.0 x 2
1.0

therefore volume of bubbles = 6 cm 3

Note that P1 and P2 have the same unit, as will V1 and V2


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