Title: States of Matter
1Chapter 13
2Ch. 13-14 States of Matter
- Intermolecular forces give rise to properties of
compounds. - Physical properties of compounds in the solid
and liquid states are determined by the types of
atoms and the arrangement of those atoms. - Physical properties of gases are __________ even
if the gases have different compositions because
they have ______________ forces of attraction
between particles.
3Kinetic Molecular Theory
- KMT describes behavior of gases in terms of
________________________ - Assumptions of Kinetic Molecular Theory
- Gas particles behave independently of one
another. i.e. - Gas particles are much smaller than the distance
between them ? - Gas particles are in constant, rapid, random
motion - Collisions between particles are elastic. i.e.
- All gases have the same average KE at a given
temperature. - (KE is directly related to the absolute
temperature.)
4Gas Behavior/Properties
- fluid gas particles easily flow past each
other - low density small mass for a large volume
1/1000 the density of most solids liquids - compressible able to be compressed into a
smaller amount of space - expandable able to be expand to the size of its
container
5Gas Behavior/Properties
- able to diffuse deals with the movement of gas
particles through space - able to effuse gas movement through a tiny
opening (pinhole) into a vacuum.
6 7 8Diffusion
- Diffusion rate of liquids and gases depends on
the kinetic energy of the molecules.
9Surface Tension
10Water and Hydrogen Bonding
The way water hydrogen bonds as a solid causes it
to be less dense than liquid water.
11Surface Tension
12Soap and Intermolecular Forces
- Soap interferes with the IMF in water and ruins
the surface tension.
13Molar Volume
- solid nitrogen 27.2 mL/mol
- liquid nitrogen 34.6 mL/mol
- gaseous nitrogen 22,400 mL/mol
- Why are molar volumes diff. for the same element?
- They are all 28.0 g of N2 1 mole N2 6.02 x
1023 molecules - Did the molecule size change? _____
- What did change? _________________________
14Molar Volume
- solid nitrogen 27.2 mL/mol
- liquid nitrogen 34.6 mL/mol
- gaseous nitrogen 22,400 mL/mol
- Do other elements have any of these same values?
- Which ones?
- Why?
15Alcohol/Water Demo
- Why arent the volumes additive?
16PHASE CHANGES
- solid
- liquid gas
- boiling vs. evaporation
17 18Two Types of Forces
19Phase Changes
- _____________ forces are broken/formed in phase
changes. - Bond breaking always __________ energy.
- Bond formation always _________ energy.
20Expt. 3 Summary
- Draw a diagram of a solid that is heated until it
is a gas. - Solids have a definite melting point.
- Liquids have a definite boiling point.
21Expt. 3 Summary
22Expt. 3 Summary
- Changes in temperature correspond with changes in
___________ kinetic energy. - Changes in phase correspond with changes in
___________ energy. - Why doesnt the temperature change when
- a. melting a solid or vaporizing a liquid?
- _____________________________________
- b. freezing a liquid/condensing a gas?
- _____________________________________
23Gas Pressure
- Pressure force
- Area
- gas particles exert pressure by collisions
with the container walls - air particles exert pressure in all directions
atmospheric pressure
24Barometer
25Air Pressure Equivalents
26Closed-End Manometer
27Open-end Manometer
28Gas Pressure
- Describe what will happen to the pressure of a
gas sample if - If temp. is ?, P ________ If temp. is ?, P
________ - If the volume of the If the volume of the
- container is ?, P ________ container is ?, P
______ - If the number of If the number of
- molecules is ?, P ________ molecules is ?, P
_____
Pressure is always the ______________
variable. Its _____________ related to
temperature and of molecules. Its
_____________ related to volume of the container.
29Air Pressure PV
30Gas Laws
Boyle Law Lab Summary
31Boyles Law
32Boyles Law
- 1) A 50.0 mL container of O2 gas has a pressure
of 2.0 atm. What will be the pressure if the
volume is -
- a) Halved? _________
-
- b) Doubled? ________
33Boyles Law
- 2) A 25.0 L sample of methane gas, CH4, is in a
container with 3.00 atm of pressure. - Whats the new pressure if the volume is changed
to. . . - 50.0 L? ________
- 12.5 L? ________
- 37.2 L? ________
34Charles Law
- 0 C _______K
- K 273.15 C 25 C ______K
- 400 K ______C
- A sample of gas occupies 823 mL _at_ 25 C. What
will be the new volume at 50C?
35Charles Law
36Gay-Lussacs Law
- 1) An aerosol can is at a pressure of 3.00 atm _at_
25 C. Whats the pressure _at_ 47 C?
37Gay-Lussacs Law
38Avogadros Law
39Avogadros Law
40Combined Gas Law
- P V k V k P k V k
- T T n
- 1) A sample of gas occupies 25.4 L at 25C and
2.1 atm. What volume will it occupy if pressure
is increased to 2.4 atm and temperature is
decreased to 0 C?
41Gas Law Review
- Identify the law that correlates with each
picture.
42Gas Law Review
- A 2.91 mol gas sample occupies 35.0 L at 20.0 C
and 2.00 atm. What is the new volume if
temperature is doubled, volume is tripled, and
the number of moles is halved?
43Homework Hints
- Problem Set 3
- 1. Why does a blowout of an automobile tire occur
most frequently when the tire is moving over
asphalt roads in the middle of the summer? - 2. A gas samples exerts 2.12 atm at 40C.
- a. What pressure would it exert at 80C?
- b. At what temperature would the pressure of
this gas sample double? - 3. A sample of gas occupies 1.25 L at 700. mmHg
and 20 C. What pressure would it exert at 50
C? - 4. A gas sample occupies 5.00 L at 730. mmHg and
20C. - What pressure would it exert if the volume is
doubled and the absolute temperature tripled? - 5. A 2.0 mol gas sample occupies 4.5 L. The
number of gas moles is increased to 3.5 moles.
Whats the new volume?
44Densities/Molar Masses of Gases
- Avogadros Principle equal volumes of gases (_at_
the same temp. and pressure) contain equal
molecules. -
- molar volume
- Molar volumes of all gases ____________ _at_
given temp. and pressure. - Densities of all gases _______________ _at_ given
temp. and pressure.
45Densities/Molar Masses of Gases
- As temperature increases, molar volumes of gases
________. - Q - What is the molar volume of a gas at room
conditions - 25C, 1 atm? - As temperature increases, densities of gases
______. - Q What is the density of oxygen gas
- at STP?
- at room conditions?
46Densities/Molar Masses of Gases
- Q Whats the molar volume of carbon dioxide at
20C if the density is 1.83 g/L?
47Daltons Law of Partial Pressures
- Daltons Law of Partial Pressures -
48Daltons Law of Partial Pressures
49Daltons Law of Partial Pressures
50Daltons Law of Partial Pressures
- Ex. 2 A gas mixture containing 2.00 mol
nitrogen, 1.00 mol oxygen, and 0.500 mol hydrogen
has a total pressure of 800. mmHg. Whats the
partial pressure of each gas?
51Daltons Law of Partial Pressures
- Ex. 3 - A gas mixture containing 8.00 g hydrogen,
8.00g helium, and 8.00g methane (CH4) has a total
pressure of 2.60 atm. Whats the partial
pressure of each gas?
52Application of Daltons Law Collecting a gas
over water
- Q- 45.0 mL of oxygen gas is collected at 20.0 C,
730.0 mmHg. - Whats the partial pressure of the oxygen gas?
- What volume would this oxygen occupy at 25C, 1
atm?
53Ideal Gas Law
Derivation R
54Ideal Gas LawDeriving Other Gas Laws
55Ideal Gas Law
- What pressure, in mmHg, is exerted by 0.325 mol
H2 gas in a 4.08 L container _at_ 35C?
56Ideal Gas Law
2. A 1.45 mol gas sample occupies 8.77 L _at_ a
pressure of 725 mmHg. What is the temperature of
this system?
57Real vs. Ideal Gases
- We assume that Ideal gases
- 1) Have no ________________
- 2) Have no ________________
- Thus,
- Real gases deviate from ideal behavior at
________ pressures and at ________ temperatures.
58Applications of Ideal Gas LawMolar Mass and
Density
- Key Unit Analysis!
- Molar mass units
- Density Units
59Applications of Ideal Gas LawMolar Mass and
Density
- 1) At 28C and 0.874 atm, 1.00 L of a gas has a
mass of 1.13 g. What is the molar mass of the
gas?
60Applications of Ideal Gas LawMolar Mass and
Density
- 2) What is the density of a sample of ammonia
gas, NH3, if the pressure is 0.928 atm and the
temp. is 63C?
61Applications of Ideal Gas LawMolar Mass and
Density
62Stoichiometry of Gases
- WO3 (s) 3 H2 (g) ? W(s) 3 H2O(l)
- 1) How many liters of hydrogen gas
- are needed to react completely with 725 grams of
tungsten oxide?
_at_ 20C, 730. mmHg
63Stoichiometry of Gases
- WO3 (s) 3 H2 (g) ? W(s) 3 H2O(l)
- 2) How many grams of tungsten are formed when
20.0 liters of hydrogen react ?
_at_ 25C, 725 mmHg
64Stoichiometry of Gases
- C3H8 (g) 5 O2 (g) ? 3 CO2 (g) 4 H2O(l)
- What will be the volume, in liters, of oxygen
required for the complete combustion of 0.400 L
of propane? - What volume of carbon dioxide will be produced?