gas laws. part 1: kinetic theory (most of this should be review)

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Gas Laws

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Page 1: Gas Laws. Part 1: Kinetic Theory (most of this should be review)

Gas Laws

Page 2: Gas Laws. Part 1: Kinetic Theory (most of this should be review)

Part 1: Kinetic Theory(most of this should be review)

Page 3: Gas Laws. Part 1: Kinetic Theory (most of this should be review)

Kinetic Theory of MatterAll matter is moving.Kinetic Energy is the energy of

motion.Temperature is a measure of Kinetic

Energy.Higher temperature indicates more

motion.Motion stops at 0 K (-273˚C)

Page 4: Gas Laws. Part 1: Kinetic Theory (most of this should be review)

Kinetics of PhasesSolids the particles have strong Inter-

molecular forces (IMF) with each other but vibrate in place.

Liquids have some IMF but can change position relative to each other.

Gases have very low IMF and have very little interaction with one another.

Page 5: Gas Laws. Part 1: Kinetic Theory (most of this should be review)

So...

Solids have a definite shape and volume.

Liquids have definite volume but not definite shape (take the shape of their container)

Gases have no definite shape or volume (expand to fill size and shape of container).

Page 9: Gas Laws. Part 1: Kinetic Theory (most of this should be review)

Part II: Properties of Gases

Page 10: Gas Laws. Part 1: Kinetic Theory (most of this should be review)

Air Pressure is Due to Gravity

Remember STP?

Standard Air Pressure is measured at Sea Level: 101.3KPa

Page 11: Gas Laws. Part 1: Kinetic Theory (most of this should be review)

CompressibilityGas molecules are very smallThe spaces between them are very

largeThe molecules can be forced closer

togetherThey can absorb a lot of energyE.g. car air bags

Page 12: Gas Laws. Part 1: Kinetic Theory (most of this should be review)

Intermolecular ForcesThe molecules are randomly moving

very fastThey move in straight-line pathsOnly change direction when they

bump into somethingThe molecules are SO far apart that

the IMF are considered to be zero

Page 13: Gas Laws. Part 1: Kinetic Theory (most of this should be review)
Page 14: Gas Laws. Part 1: Kinetic Theory (most of this should be review)

Variables in the Gas Formulas

P = pressure in kilopascals (kPa)V = volume of the gas in litres (L)T = temperature in kelvins (K)n = number of moles

Page 15: Gas Laws. Part 1: Kinetic Theory (most of this should be review)

Δ Moles, Δ PressureVolume remains constantTemperature remains constantDoubling the number of gas

particles (moles) doubles the pressure

Page 16: Gas Laws. Part 1: Kinetic Theory (most of this should be review)

Δ Volume, Δ PressureTemperature remains constantNumber of particles (moles) remains

constantDecreasing the volume by half will

double the pressure

Page 17: Gas Laws. Part 1: Kinetic Theory (most of this should be review)

Δ Temperature, Δ PressureVolume remains constant.Number of moles remains constantDoubling the temperature will

double the pressure

Page 18: Gas Laws. Part 1: Kinetic Theory (most of this should be review)

Part III: Gas Laws

Page 19: Gas Laws. Part 1: Kinetic Theory (most of this should be review)

Boyle’s Law

Temperature remains constantPressure goes up, volume goes

downPressure goes down volume goes up

Page 20: Gas Laws. Part 1: Kinetic Theory (most of this should be review)

Inverse relationship creates a curve, not a line…

Page 21: Gas Laws. Part 1: Kinetic Theory (most of this should be review)

Charles’s Law

Pressure is constant

Temperature goes up, volume goes up

Temperature goes down, volume goes down.

Page 22: Gas Laws. Part 1: Kinetic Theory (most of this should be review)

The Mylar Balloon on a cold day…

Demo

Page 23: Gas Laws. Part 1: Kinetic Theory (most of this should be review)

Gay-Lussac’s Law

Volume is constantTemperature increases, pressure

increasesTemperature decreases, pressure

decreases.

Page 24: Gas Laws. Part 1: Kinetic Theory (most of this should be review)

Ideal Gas LawPV=nRT where R is the gas law

constant 8.31 L•kPa

Ideal GasesFollow the law preciselyThe particles must have no volumeMust have no IMFNo ideal gases exist

Page 25: Gas Laws. Part 1: Kinetic Theory (most of this should be review)

Guess where we find this…

Page 26: Gas Laws. Part 1: Kinetic Theory (most of this should be review)

The most ideal gases are H2 and He

Page 27: Gas Laws. Part 1: Kinetic Theory (most of this should be review)
Page 28: Gas Laws. Part 1: Kinetic Theory (most of this should be review)