Title: Gases CHAPTER 10
1Gases CHAPTER 10
- Powerpoint from Melissa Brophys website
(http//teacherweb.com/TX/McNeilHS/brophy/photo7.a
spx) and modified for our class
2Gases (Chapter 10)
- Resources and Activities
- Textbook - chapter 10 ppt file
- Online practice quiz from Pearson - chapter 10
- Lab activities
- (1) Molar volume of a gas (wet lab)
- (2) Virtual labs gas laws (next slide)
- POGIL activities
- Ideal gas law
- Partial Pressure
- Comprehensive tutorial and animations on
Intermolecular forces - http//www.chem.purdue.edu/gchelp/liquids/imf2.htm
l
Chemtour videos from W.W. Norton (chapter 6
ideal gas law Daltons law molecular speed)
http//www.wwnorton.com/college/chemistry/gilber
t2/contents/ch06/studyplan.asp See NEXT SLIDE
3- Animation on gases to view in class
- http//glencoe.com/sites/common_assets/advanced_p
lacement/chemistry_chang9e/animations/chang_7e_esp
/gam2s2_6.swf - Independent work - students to view animations
interactive activities (4 in total) and write
summary notes on each. These summaries are to be
included in your portfolio - http//glencoe.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0035715985/s
tudent_view0/chapter5/animations_center.html - Virtual lab activity (To complete at home and to
hand in for grading) - Boyles Law Objective Explore the effects of V
on P at constant T (for a fixed quantity of gas
molecules ). Task Generate, record and graph
data for three gases. Print and Discuss your
results. Go to http//www.chem.iastate.edu/group
/Greenbowe/sections/projectfolder/flashfiles/gasla
w/boyles_law_graph.html - Charles Law Objective Explore the effect of T on
V at constant P (for a fixed quantity of gas
molecules). Task generate, record and graph
data. Print and discuss your results. Go to - http//www.chem.iastate.edu/group/Greenbowe/sectio
ns/projectfolder/flashfiles/gaslaw/charles_law.htm
l -
4 Activities and Problem set for chapter 10 (due
date_______)
- Complete the chapter 10 packet part (a)
Characteristics of Gases ( sample, practice and
integrative exercises - show work) and part (b)
AP Chemistry Gas Law Practice - Do all chapter 10 GIST and Visualizing concepts
problems - write out questions and answers show
work. (NB Photocopy of questions is also
acceptable)
- TextBook ch. 10 all sections required for
regents (in part), SAT II and AP exams - Lab activities (wet lab and virtual lab)
- POGILS (2)
- Online practice quiz ch 10 due by_____
5Measurements on Gases
- Properties of gases
- Gases uniformly fill any container
- Gases are easily compressed
- Gases mix completely with any other gas
- Gases exert pressure on their surroundings
- Pressure Force
- Area
6Measurements on Gases
- Measuring pressure
- The barometer measures atmospheric pressure
- Inventor Evangelista Torricelli (1643)
7Measurements on Gases
- The manometer measures confined gas pressure
8Measurements on Gases
- Units
- mm Hg (torr)
- 760 torr standard pressure
- Kilopascal (kPa)
- 101.325 kPa standard pressure
- Atmospheres
- 1 atmosphere (atm) standard pressure
- STP 1 atm 760 torr 760 mmHg 101.325 kPa
9Measurements on Gases
- Example Convert 0.985 atm to torr and to kPa.
0.985 atm
760 torr
749 torr
1 atm
0.985 atm
101.325 kPa
98.3 kPa
1 atm
10The Gas Laws of Boyle, Charles and Avogadro
- Boyles Law (Robert Boyle, 1627-1691)
- The product of pressure times volume is a
constant, provided the temperature remains the
same - PV k
11The Gas Laws of Boyle, Charles and Avogadro
- P is inversely related to V
- The graph of P versus V is hyperbolic
- Volume increases linearly as the pressure
decreases - As you squeeze a zip lock bag filled with air
(reducing the volume), the pressure increases
making it difficult to keep squeezing
12The Gas Laws of Boyle, Charles and Avogadro
- At constant temperature, Boyles law can be used
to find a new volume or a new pressure - P1V1 k P2V2
- or P1V1 P2V2
- Boyles law works best at low pressures
- Gases that obey Boyles law are called Ideal
gases
13The Gas Laws of Boyle, Charles and Avogadro
- Example A gas which has a pressure of 1.3 atm
occupies a volume of 27 L. What volume will the
gas occupy if the pressure is increased to 3.9
atm at constant temperature? - P1 1.3 atm
- V1 27 L
- P2 3.9 atm
- V2 ?
(1.3atm)(27L) (3.9atm)V2 V2 9.0 L
14The Gas Laws of Boyle, Charles and Avogadro
- Charles Law (Jacques Charles, 1746 1823)
- The volume of a gas increase linearly with
temperature provided the pressure remains
constant - V bT V b V1 b V2
- T T1 T2
- or V1 V2
- T1 T2
15The Gas Laws of Boyle, Charles and Avogadro
- Temperature must be measured in Kelvin
- ( K C 273)
- 0 K is absolute zero
16The Gas Laws of Boyle, Charles and Avogadro
- Example A gas at 30C and 1.00 atm has a volume
of 0.842L. What volume will the gas occupy at
60C and 1.00 atm? - V1 0.842L
- T1 30C (273 303K)
- V2 ?
- T2 60C (273 333K)
17- 0.842L V2
- 303K 333K
- V2 0.925L
18The Gas Laws of Boyle, Charles and Avogadro
- Avogadros Law (Amedeo Avogadro, 1811)
- For a gas at constant temperature and pressure,
the volume is directly proportional to the number
of moles, n - V an V/n a
- V1 a V2 or V1 V2
- n1 n2 n1 n2
19The Gas Laws of Boyle, Charles and Avogadro
- Example A 5.20L sample at 18C and 2.00 atm
contains 0.436 moles of a gas. If we add an
additional 1.27 moles of the gas at the same
temperature and pressure, what will the total
volume occupied by the gas be? - V1 5.20L
- n1 0.436 mol
- V2 ?
- n2 1.27 mol 0.436 mol 1.706 mol
20The Gas Laws of Boyle, Charles and Avogadro
- 5.20 L V2
- 0.436 mol 1.706 mol
- x 20.3L
21The Ideal Gas Law
- Derivation from existing laws
- Vk VbT Van
- P
-
- V kba(Tn)
- P
22The Ideal Gas Law
- Constants k, b, a are combined into the universal
gas constant (R), - V nRT or PV nRT
- P
23The Ideal Gas Law
- R PV using standard numbers will give you R
- nT
- STP
- P 1 atm
- V 22.4L
- n 1 mol
- T 273K
- Therefore if we solve for R, R 0.0821 L
atm/mol K
24The Ideal Gas Law
- Example A sample containing 0.614 moles of a
gas at 12C occupies a volume of 12.9L. What
pressure does the gas exert? - P ?
- V 12.9L
- n 0.614 mol
- R 0.0821 Latm/mol K
- T 12 273 285K
25The Ideal Gas Law
- (P)(12.9L) (0.614mol)(0.0821 Latm/mol
K)(285K) - Hint Rearrange and re-write (watch out for units
in numerator and denominator) - P 1.11 atm
26The Ideal Gas Law
- Solving for new volumes, temperature, or pressure
(n remaining constant) - Combined Law
- P1V1 nR P2V2 or P1V1 P2V2
- T1 T2 T1 T2
27The Ideal Gas Law
- Example A sample of methane gas at 0.848 atm
and 4.0C occupies a volume of 7.0L. What volume
will the gas occupy if the pressure is increased
to 1.52 atm and the temperature increased to
11.0C? - P1 0.848 atm P2 1.52 atm
- V1 7.0L V2 ?
- T1 4273 277K T2 11273 284K
28The Ideal Gas Law
- (0.848atm)(7.0L) (1.52atm)(V2)
- 277K 284K
- V2 4.0L
29Gas Stoichiometry
- Molar volume
- One mole of an ideal gas occupies 22.4L of volume
at STP - Things to remember
- Density mass
- volume
- n grams of substance m
- molar mass M
- PV mRT
- M
30Gas Stoichiometry
- Example A sample containing 15.0g of dry ice
(CO2(s)) is put into a balloon and allowed to
sublime according to the following equation
CO2(s) ? CO2(g) - How big will the balloon be (i.e. what is the
volume of the balloon) at 22C and 1.04 atm,
after all of the dry ice has sublimed?
31Gas Stoichiometry
- Moles of CO2(s)
- 15g 1 mol 0.341 mol CO2(s)
- 44 g
- 0.341 mol CO2(s) 1 CO2(g) 0.341 mol CO2(g)
- 1 CO2(s) n
32Gas Stoichiometry
- P 1.04 atm
- V ?
- n 0.341 mol
- R 0.0821 Latm/mol K
- T 22C 273 295K
- V 7.94L
33Gas Stoichiometry
- Limiting Reactant Example 0.500L of H2(g) are
reacted with 0.600L of O2(g) at STP according to
the equation 2H2(g) O2(g) ? 2H2O(g) - What volume will the H2O occupy at 1.00 atm and
350C?
34Gas Stoichiometry
- H2 0.5L 1 mol 2 H2O 0.0223 mol H2O
- 22.4L 2 H2
- O2 0.6L 1 mol 2 H2O 0.0536 mol H2O
- 22.4L 1 O2
35Gas Stoichiometry
- H2
- (1 atm)(V) (0.0223mol)(0.0821 Latm/mol
K)(623K) - V 1.14L
- O2
- (1atm)(V) (0.0536mol)(0.0821 Latm/mol
K)(623K) - V 2.74L
Limiting reactant and how much volume is produced!
36Gas Stoichiometry
- Density/Molar Mass example A gas at 34C and
1.75 atm has a density of 3.40g/L. Calculate the
molar mass of the gas. - D mass 3.40 3.40g
- V 1L
- P 1.75 atm R 0.0821 Latm/mol K
- V 1L T 34 273 307K
- m 3.40 g M x
37Gas Stoichiometry
- (1.75atm)(1L) (3.4g)(0.0821 Latm/mol
K)(307K) - M
- M molar mass
- M 48.97 g/mol
38Daltons Law of Partial Pressures (John Dalton,
1803)
- Statement of law
- 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 - It is the total number of moles of particles that
is important, not the identity or composition of
the gas particles.
39Daltons Law of Partial Pressures
- Derivation
- Ptotal P1 P2 P3
- P1 n1RT P2 n2RT P3 n3RT .
- V V V
- Ptotal n1RT n2RT n3RT
- V V V
- Ptotal (n1n2n3) (RT)
- V
- Ptotal ntotal (RT)
- V
40Daltons Law of Partial Pressures
- Example Oxygen gas is collected over water at
28C. The total pressure of the sample is 5.5
atm. At 28C, the vapor pressure of water is 1.2
atm. What pressure is the oxygen gas exerting? - Ptotal PO2 PH2O
- 5.5 x 1.2
- X 4.3 atm
41Daltons Law of Partial Pressures
- Mole Fraction
- The ratio of the number of moles of a given
component in a mixture to the total number of
moles in the mixture - For an ideal gas, the mole fraction (x)
- x1 n1 P1
- ntotal Ptotal
42Daltons Law of Partial Pressures
- Example The vapor pressure of water in air at
28C is 28.3 torr. Calculate the mole fraction
of water in a sample of air at 28C and 1.03 atm.
- XH2O PH2O 28.3 torr
- Pair 783 torr
- 0.036
43Daltons Law of Partial Pressures
- Example A mixture of gases contains 1.5 moles
of oxygen, 7.5 moles of nitrogen and 0.5 moles of
carbon dioxide. If the total pressure exerted is
800 mmHg, what are the partial pressures of each
gas in the mixture?
44Daltons Law of Partial Pressures
- Calculate the total number of moles
- 1.5 7.5 0.5 9.5 moles
- Use mole fractions for each individual gas
- PO2 800mmHg x 1.5 mol 126 mmHg
- 9.5 mol
- PN2 800mmHg x 7.5 mol 632 mmHg
- 9.5 mol
- PCO2 800mmHg x 0.5 mol 42 mmHg
- 9.5 mol
45Kinetic Molecular Theory of Gases
- Postulates of the KMT Related to Ideal Gases
- The particles are so small compared with the
distances between them that the volume of the
individual particles can be assumed to be zero - The particles are in constant motion. Collisions
of the particles with the walls of the container
cause pressure. - Assume that the particles exert no forces on each
other - The average kinetic energy of a collection of gas
particles is assumed to be directly proportional
to the Kelvin temperature of the gas
46Kinetic Molecular Theory of Gases
- Explaining Observed Behavior with KMT
- P and V (T constant)
- As V is decreased, P increases
- V decrease causes a decrease in the surface area.
Since P is force/area, the decrease in V causes
the area to decrease, thus increasing the P
47Kinetic Molecular Theory of Gases
- P and T (V constant)
- As T increase, P increases
- The increase in T causes an increase in average
kinetic energy. Molecules moving faster collide
with the walls of the container more frequently,
and with greater force.
48Kinetic Molecular Theory of Gases
- V and T (P constant)
- As T increases, V also increases
- Increased T creates more frequent, more forceful
collisions. V must increase proportionally to
increase the surface area, and maintain P
49Kinetic Molecular Theory of Gases
- V and n (T and P constant)
- As n increases, V must increase
- Increasing the number of particles increases the
number of collisions. This can be balanced by an
increase in V to maintain constant P
50Kinetic Molecular Theory of Gases
- Daltons Law of partial pressures
- P is independent of the type of gas molecule
- KMT states that particles are independent, and V
is assumed to be zero. The identity of the
molecule is therefore unimportant
51Kinetic Molecular Theory of Gases
- Root 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 gas particles in kg
- R 8.3145 J/Kmol
- joule kgm2/s2
- urms 3RT
- M
52Kinetic Molecular Theory of Gases
- Example Calculate the root mean square velocity
for the atoms in a sample of oxygen gas at 0C. - MO2 32g/mol
- 32g 1 kg 0.032 kg
- 1000g
- T 0 273 273K
- R 8.3145 J/Kmol
53Kinetic Molecular Theory of Gases
- Urms 3(8.3145 kgm2 s-2K-1 mol-1)(273 K)
461ms-1 - 0.032 kgmol-1
- Answer 461ms-1 or 461 m/s
- Recall 1 Joule 1 J 1 kg m2/s2 1 kg m2 s-2
54Kinetic Molecular Theory of Gases
- Mean Free Path distance between collisions
- Average distance a molecule travels between
collisions - 1 x 10 -7 m for O2 at STP
55Effusion and Diffusion
- Effusion
- Movement of a gas through a small opening into an
evacuated container (vacuum) - Grahams law of effusion
- Rate of effusion for gas 1 vM2
- Rate of effusion for gas 2 vM1
56Effusion and Diffusion
- Example How many times faster than He would NO2
gas effuse? - MNO2 46.01 g/mol larger mass
- MHe 4.003 g/mol effuses slower
- Rate He 46.01 He effuses 3.39
- Rate NO2 4.003 times faster
57Real Gases and van der Waals Equation (Johannes
van der Waals, 1873)
- Volume
- Real gas molecules do have volume
- Volume available is not 100 of the container
volume - n number of moles
- b is an empirical constant, derived from
experimental results
58Real Gases and van der Waals Equation
- Ideal P nRT
- V
- Real P nRT
- V-nb
59Real Gases and van der Waals Equation
- Pressure
- Molecules of real gases do experience attractive
forces - a proportionality constant determined by
observation of the gas - Pobs Pideal a(n/V)2
-
60Real Gases and van der Waals Equation
- Combining to derive van der Waals equation
- Pobs nRT - n2a
- V-nb V2
- And then rearranging
- (Pobs n2a/V2)(V-nb) nRT
-
61Chemistry in the Atmosphere
- Composition of the Troposphere
- The atmosphere is composed of 78 N2, 21 O2,
0.9Ar, and 0.03 CO2 along with trace gases. - The composition of the atmosphere varies as a
function of distance from the earths surface.
Heavier molecules tend to be near the surface due
to gravity.
62Chemistry in the Atmosphere
- Upper atmospheric chemistry is largely affected
by ultraviolet, x ray, and cosmic radiation
emanating from space. The ozone layer is
especially reactive to ultraviolet radiation - Manufacturing and other processes of our modern
society affect the chemistry of our atmosphere.
Air pollution is a direct result of such
processes.