Title: Gases
1Chapter 5
2Ideal Gases
Ideal gases are imaginary gases that
perfectly fit all of the assumptions of the
kinetic molecular theory.
- Gases consist of tiny particles that are far
apart - relative to their size.
- Collisions between gas particles and between
- particles and the walls of the container are
- elastic collisions
- No kinetic energy is lost in elastic collisions
3Ideal Gases (continued)
- Gas particles are in constant, rapid motion.
They - therefore possess kinetic energy, the energy
of - motion
- There are no forces of attraction between gas
- particles
- The average kinetic energy of gas particles
- depends on temperature, not on the identity
- of the particle.
4The Nature of Gases
- Gases expand to fill their containers
- Gases are fluid they flow
- Gases have low density
- 1/1000 the density of the equivalent liquid or
solid - Gases are compressible
- Gases effuse and diffuse
5Pressure
- Pressure is caused by the collisions of molecules
with the walls of a container - Pressure is equal to force/unit area
- SI units N/meter2 1 Pascal (Pa)
- 1 atmosphere 101,325 Pa 101.325 kPa
- 1 atmosphere 1 atm 760 mm Hg 760 torr
6Measuring Pressure
The first device for measuring atmospheric pressur
e was developed by Evangelista Torricelli during
the 17th century.
The device was called a barometer
- Baro weight
- Meter measure
7An Early Barometer
The normal pressure due to the atmosphere at sea
level can support a column of mercury that is 760
mm high.
8Converting Celsius to Kelvin
Gas law problems involving temperature require
that the temperature be in KELVIN (K)!
Kelvin ?C 273
C Kelvin - 273
O K absolute zero 273 K OC 373 K 100C
9Standard Temperature and PressureSTP
- P 1 atmosphere, 760 torr
- T 0C, 273 Kelvin
- The molar volume of an ideal gas is 22.4
liters at STP - 22.4 L / mole of gas at 0C and 1 atm called
the molar volume
10The Combined Gas Law
The combined gas law expresses the relationship
between pressure, volume and temperature of a
fixed amount of gas (of moles of gas are
constant)
PV k T
Boyles law, Gay-Lussacs law, and Charles law
are all derived from this by holding a variable
constant.
11Robert Boyle(1627-1691)
- Boyle was born into an aristocratic Irish family
- Became interested in medicine and the new
science of Galileo and studied chemistry. - A founder and an influential fellow of the Royal
Society of London - Wrote prolifically on science, philosophy, and
theology.
12Boyles Law
Pressure is inversely proportional to volume when
temperature is held constant. (Temperature and
of moles are constant)
13Why Dont I Get a Constant Value for PV k?
- Air is not made
- of ideal gases
2. Real gases deviate from ideal behavior at
high pressure
14Jacques Charles (1746-1823)
- French Physicist
- Conducted the first scientific balloon flight in
1783
15Charless Law
- The volume of a gas is directly proportional to
temperature, and extrapolates to zero at zero
Kelvin - (Pressure and of moles are constant)
- As temperature increases, volume increases
- As temp. decreases, volume decreases
- At absolute zero (O K), volume approaches zero,
and KE approaches zero
16Avogadros Law
- For a gas at constant temperature and pressure,
the volume is directly proportional to the number
of moles of gas (at low pressures). - V an
- a proportionality constant
- V volume of the gas
- n number of moles of gas
17Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac1778 - 1850
- French chemist and physicist
- Known for his studies on the physical properties
of gases. - In 1804 he made balloon ascensions to study
magnetic forces and to observe the composition
and temperature of the air at different
altitudes.
18Gay Lussacs Law
The pressure and temperature of a gas
are directly related when the volume remains
constant (directly related).
(Volume constant)
As pressure increases, more collisions occur, and
a higher temperature. As pressure decreases,
fewer collisions and a lower temperature.
19Ideal Gas Law
- PV nRT
- P pressure in atm
- V volume in liters
- n moles
- R proportionality constant
- 0.08206 L atm/ molK
- T temperature in Kelvins
-
- Limitations of Ideal Gas Law
- Works well at low P and high T
- Most gases do not behave ideally above 1 atm
- Does not work well near the condensation
- conditions of a gas (becomes like a liquid)
20Examples
- A 47.3 L container containing 1.62 mol of He is
heated until the pressure reaches 1.85 atm. What
is the temperature? - Kr gas in a 18.5 L cylinder exerts a pressure of
8.61 atm at 24.8ºC What is the mass of Kr? - A sample of gas has a volume of 4.18 L at 29ºC
and 732 torr. What would its volume be at 24.8ºC
and 756 torr?
21Standard Molar Volume
Equal volumes of all gases at the same
temperature and pressure contain the same number
of molecules. - Amedeo Avogadro
22Gas Density
so at STP (0C and 1atm)
23Density and the Ideal Gas Law
Combining the formula for density with the Ideal
Gas law, substituting and rearranging
algebraically
M Molar Mass g/mol P Pressure R Gas
Constant T Temperature in Kelvins m sample
mass
Can also be rearranged to solve for the Molar
Mass of the gas
24Examples
- What is the density of ammonia at 23ºC and 735
torr? - A compound has the empirical formula CHCl. A 256
mL flask at 100.ºC and 750 torr contains .80 g of
the gaseous compound. What is the empirical
formula?
25Law of Combining Volumes
If reactants and products are at the same
conditions of temperature and pressure, then mole
ratios of gases are also volume ratios.
3 H2(g) N2(g) ?
2NH3(g)
3 moles H2 1 mole N2 ?
2 moles NH3
3 liters H2 1 liter N2 ?
2 liters NH3
26Gas Stoichiometry 2
How many liters of ammonia can be produced when
12 liters of hydrogen react with an excess of
nitrogen?
3 H2(g) N2(g) ?
2NH3(g)
12 L H2
L NH3
2
L NH3
8.0
L H2
3
27Gas Stoichiometry 3
How many liters of oxygen gas, at STP, can be
collected from the complete decomposition of 50.0
grams of potassium chlorate?
2 KClO3(s) ? 2 KCl(s) 3 O2(g)
50.0 g KClO3
1 mol KClO3
3 mol O2
22.4 L O2
122.55 g KClO3
2 mol KClO3
1 mol O2
L O2
13.7
28Gas Stoichiometry 4
How many liters of oxygen gas, at 37.0?C and
0.930 atmospheres, can be collected from the
complete decomposition of 50.0 grams of potassium
chlorate?
2 KClO3(s) ? 2 KCl(s) 3 O2(g)
50.0 g KClO3
1 mol KClO3
3 mol O2
n mol O2
0.612 mol O2
122.55 g KClO3
2 mol KClO3
16.7 L
29Examples
- Using the following reaction
- Calculate the mass of sodium hydrogen carbonate
necessary to produce 2.87 L of carbon dioxide at
25ºC and 2.00 atm. - If 27 L of gas are produced at 26ºC and 745 torr
when 2.6 L of HCl are added what is the
concentration of HCl?
30Examples
- Consider the following reaction What
volume of NO at 1.0 atm and 1000ºC can be
produced from 10.0 L of NH3 and excess O2 at the
same temperature and pressure? - What volume of O2 measured at STP will be
consumed when 10.0 kg NH3 is reacted?
31The Same reaction
- What mass of H2O will be produced from 65.0 L of
O2 and 75.0 L of NH3 both measured at STP? - What volume Of NO would be produced?
- What mass of NO is produced from 500. L of NH3 at
250.0ºC and 3.00 atm?
32Examples
- Mercury can be achieved by the following
reaction What volume of oxygen gas can
be produced from 4.10 g of mercury (II) oxide at
STP? - At 400.ºC and 740 torr?
33Daltons Law of Partial Pressures
- For a mixture of gases in a container, the total
pressure exerted is the sum of the pressures each
gas would exert if it were alone. - PTotal P1 P2 P3 . . .
- Ptotal (n1n2n3)(RT/V)
It is the total number of moles of particles that
is important, not the identity or composition of
the gases.
34Examples
3.50 L O2
1.50 L N2
4.00 L CH4
0.752 atm
2.70 atm
4.58 atm
- When these valves are opened, what is each
partial pressure and the total pressure?
35This is particularly useful in calculating the
pressure of gases collected over water. Ptotal
Pgas A PH2O (depends of H2O temp)
KClO3(s) ? KCl(s) O2(g)
36Vapor Pressure
- Water evaporates!
- When that water evaporates, the vapor has a
pressure. - Gases are often collected over water so the
vapor. Pressure of water must be subtracted from
the total pressure. - It must be given and is dependent on the water
temperature.
37Example
- N2O can be produced by the following
reaction what volume of N2O
collected over water at a total pressure of 94
kPa and 22ºC can be produced from 2.6 g of
NH4NO3? ( the vapor pressure of water at 22ºC is
21 torr)
38The Mole Fraction
- Ratio of moles of the substance to the total
moles. - symbol is Greek letter chi c
- c1 n1 P1 nTotal PTotal
39Examples
- The partial pressure of nitrogen in air is 592
torr. Air pressure is 752 torr, what is the mole
fraction of nitrogen? - What is the partial pressure of nitrogen if the
container holding the air is compressed to 5.25
atm?
40Kinetic Molecular Theory
- Particles of matter are ALWAYS in motion
- Volume of individual particles is ? zero gases
have lots of space in between particles lots of
empty space - Collisions between particles and walls of the
container are elastic. (No loss of energy due to
friction, heat, etc.) - Collisions of particles with container walls
cause pressure exerted by gas. - Particles exert no IM forces on each other no
H-bonding, dipole-dipole, or London forces
(forces of attraction and repulsion) - Average kinetic energy is approx. equal to the
temperature of a gas.
41Kinetic Energy of Gas Particles
At the same conditions of temperature, all
gases have the same average kinetic energy.
The Meaning of Temperature
Kelvin temperature is an index of the random
motions of gas particles (higher T means greater
motion.)
42Root Mean Square Velocity
- Velocity of a gas is dependent on mass and
temperature - Velocity of gases is determined as an average
- M mass of one mole of a gas particles in kg
- R 8.3145 J/Kmol
- 1 J kgm2/s2
43Example
- Calculate the root mean square velocity of
carbon dioxide at 25ºC. - Calculate the root mean square velocity of
hydrogen at 25ºC. - Calculate the root mean square velocity of
chlorine at 25ºC.
44Range of velocities
- The average distance a molecule travels before
colliding with another is called the mean free
path and is small (near 10-7) - Temperature is an average. There are molecules of
many speeds in the average. - Shown on a graph called a velocity distribution
45(No Transcript)
46Velocity
- Average increases as temperature increases.
- Spread increases as temperature increases.
47Diffusion
Diffusion describes the mixing of gases. The
rate of diffusion is the rate of gas mixing.
(movement from high conc. to low conc.)
48Diffusion
- The spreading of a gas through a room.
- Slow considering molecules move at 100s of
meters per second. - Collisions with other molecules slow down
diffusions. - Best estimate is Grahams Law.
49Effusion
- Effusion describes the passage of gas into an
evacuated chamber.
50Effusion
- Passage of gas through a small hole, into a
vacuum. - The effusion rate measures how fast this happens.
- Grahams Law the rate of effusion is inversely
proportional to the square root of the mass of
its particles.
51Deriving
- The rate of effusion should be proportional to
urms - Effusion Rate 1 urms 1 Effusion Rate 2
urms 2
52Grahams LawRates of Effusion and Diffusion
Effusion
Diffusion
53Examples
- A compound effuses through a porous cylinder 3.20
time faster than helium. What is its molar mass? - If 0.00251 mol of NH3 effuse through a hole in
2.47 min, how much HCl would effuse in the same
time? - A sample of N2 effuses through a hole in 38
seconds. what must be the molecular weight of gas
that effuses in 55 seconds under identical
conditions?
54Real Gases
Must correct ideal gas behavior when at high
pressure (smaller volume) and low temperature
(attractive forces become important).
corrected pressure
corrected volume
55Real Gases
- Volume
- Real gas molecules have volume
- Volume available is not 100 of the
- container volume
- n number of moles
- b constant taking into account
- real gas volume
- Pressure
- Molecules of real gases do experience
- forces
- a proportionality constant determined by
observation of the gas
corrected pressure
corrected volume
56Example
- Calculate the pressure exerted by 0.5000 mol Cl2
in a 1.000 L container at 25.0ºC - Using the ideal gas law.
- Van der Waals equation
- a 6.49 atm L2 /mol2
- b 0.0562 L/mol