Gases and Gas Laws
Gases and Gas Laws
Gases and Gas Laws
Gases
EQ:
How do we use the Kinetic
Molecular Theory to explain
the behavior of gases?
States of Matter
2 main factors determine state:
• The forces (inter/intramolecular) holding particles together
• The kinetic energy present (the energy an object possesses due to its motion of the particles)
• KE tends to ‘pull’ particles apart
Kinetic Energy , States of Matter & Temperature
Gases have a higher kinetic energy because their particles move a lot more
than in a solid or a liquid
As the temperature increases, there gas particles move faster, and thus kinetic
energy increases.
Characteristics of Gases
Gases expand to fill any container.
• random motion, no attraction
Gases are fluids (like liquids).
• no attraction
Gases have very low densities.
• no volume = lots of empty space
Characteristics of Gases
Gases can be compressed.
• no volume = lots of empty space
Gases undergo diffusion & effusion (across a barrier with small holes).
• random motion
Kinetic Molecular Theory of ‘Ideal’ Gases
Particles in an ideal gas…
• have no volume.
• have elastic collisions (ie. billiard ball
particles exchange energy with eachother,
but total KE is conserved
• are in constant, random, straight-line
motion.
• don’t attract or repel each other.
• have an avg. KE directly related to
temperature ( temp= motion= KE)
Real Gases
Particles in a REAL gas…
• have their own volume
• attract each other (intermolecular
forces)
Gas behavior is most ideal…
• at low pressures
• at high temperatures
Why???
Real Gases
At STP, molecules of gas are moving fast and are
very far apart, making their intermolecular forces
and volumes insignificant, so assumptions of an
ideal gas are valid under normal temp/pressure
conditions. BUT…
force
pressure
area
Mercury Barometer
Units of Pressure
At Standard Atmospheric Pressure (SAP)
101.325 kPa (kilopascal)
1 atm (atmosphere)
760 mm Hg
(millimeter Hg) N
760 torr kPa 2
m
14.7 psi (pounds per square inch)
Standard Temperature & Pressure
STP
Standard Temperature & Pressure
0°C 273 K
-OR-
1 atm 101.325 kPa
Temperature: The Kelvin Scale
Always use absolute temperature
(Kelvin) when working with gases.
ºC
-273 0 100
K
0 273 373
C K 273 K = ºC + 273
Kelvin and Absolute Zero
Scottish physicist Lord Kelvin suggested that -273oC (0K) was the temperature at which the motion particles
within a gas approaches zero.. And thus, so does volume)
Absolute Zero:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JHXxPnmyDbk
Comparing the Celsius and Kelvin Scale:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-G9FdNqUVBQ
Why Use the Kelvin Scale?
Not everything freezes at 0oC, but for ALL substances, motion stops at 0K.
It eliminates the use of negative values for temperature! Makes mathematic
calculations possible (to calculate the temp. twice warmer than -5oC we can’t
use 2x(-5oC) because we would get -10oC!)
Kelvin Scale vs Celsius Scale
Converting between Kelvin and Celsius
C K 273 K = ºC + 273
a) 0oC =_____K
b) 100oC= _____K
c) 25oC =______K
d) -12oC = ______K
e) -273K = ______oC
f) 23.5K = ______oC
g) 373.2K= ______oC
How Did We Do So Far?
Learning Goal:
V
1. Boyle’s Law
P1V1=P2V2
Where P1 represents the initial pressure
T
2. Charles’ Law
2. Charles’ Law
Charles’ Law leads to the mathematical
expression:
T
2. Gay-Lussac’s Law
Gay-Lussac’s Law leads to the
mathematical expression:
P1V1 P2V2
=
T1 T2
Example Problem:
A gas occupies 7.84 cm3 at 71.8 kPa & 25°C. Find
its volume at STP.
Any Combination Questions
a) A gas occupies 473 cm3 at 36°C. Find its volume at 94°C