Title: The Behavior Of Gases
1CHAPTER 11
The Behavior Of Gases
2Characteristics of Gases
- Substances that are normally liquids or solids
can have a gaseous phase as well, where they are
referred to as VAPORS - A gas expands spontaneously to fill its container
- Gases are easily compressed
- They form homogeneous mixtures with each other
3More Characteristics..
- Their individual molecules are relatively far
apart - In the air we breathe, the molecules only take up
about 0.1 of the total volume, the rest being
empty space - Gas molecules are not very attracted to each
other - Molecules for solids and liquids are close
together and attracted to one another
4Adding or Removing Gas
- Gas molecules are constantly colliding with each
other and with the sides of their container. - As you add gas (pumping up a tire), you increase
the number of gas particles. - This makes the particles collide even more !
- Increase in pressure (force that acts on a given
area)
5If you keep adding air to a tire
- The pressure becomes greater than the strength of
the container - The tire will explode!
6Letting air out of a tire, or container
- Decreases the pressure
- There are less particles left to collide
- There is a lot more empty space
7Three Variables in Gas Laws
- Pressure
- Volume
- Temperature
- In testing the behavior of gases, one variable
must be held constant.
8Boyles Law
- At a constant temperature, a volume of gas varies
inversely with pressure
P1
P2
V2
V1
9The Formula
10Try One
- A sample of oxygen gas occupies a volume of 6.3 L
at 0.98 atm. What volume will it occupy at 1.2
atm.? - Answer 5.1 L
11Charles Law
- Held pressure constant
- Studied the effects of temperature on volume
- The volume of a gas is directly proportional to
its Kelvin temperature if pressure is kept
constant
12Its a direct relationship
100 kPa
100 kPa
V2
V1
T1
T2
13The Formula
14Try One..
- A sample of nitrogen occupies a volume of 1.6 L
at 275 K. What volume will it occupy at 295 K? - Answer 1.7 L
15Gay-Lussacs Lawdont laugh, thats his name
- Volume held constant
- The pressure of a gas is directly proportional to
the Kelvin temperature
P2
P1
T1
T2
16The Formula
17Example
- If a sample of Helium at 220K exerts a pressure
of 98.2 kPa, what would its temperature be at
101.3 kPa? - Answer 226.9K
18So if they proved that all this stuff is true
- Then we can combine the three gas laws into a
single one called -
The Combined Gas Law
P1 x V1 P2 x V2 T1 T2
19The Ideal Gas Law
- The previous gas laws havent dealt with amounts
of gas. - If you want to throw moles into the mix, then you
use the Ideal Gas Law - PV nRT
- n is equal to the number of moles
20So, where did the R come from?
- R is the ideal gas constant
- You know that one mole of every gas occupies 22.4
Liters at STP
21Rearrange the equation to solve for R
- P x V R
- T x n
- 101.3 kPa x 22.4 L
- 273 K x 1 mol
- 8.31 (L x kPa)/(K x mol)
22R can also be expressed in different units,
23Dalton's Law of Partial Pressures
- At constant volume and temperature, the total
pressure exerted by a mixture of gases is equal
to the sum of its parts - Ptotal P1 P2 P3
24EXAMPLE
- The air we breathe contains O2, N2, CO2, and
trace gases - Calculate the partial pressure of oxygen (PO2) at
101.3 kPa if PN2 79.10 kPa, PCO2 0.040 kPa,
and Ptrace 0.94 kPa - Ptotal PO2 PN2 PCO2 Ptrace
- Rearrange to solve for PO2
25The formula becomes
- PO2 Ptotal (PN2 PCO2 Ptrace)
-
- 101.3 kPa (79.10 kPa 0.040 kPa
- 0.94 kPa)
- 21.22 kPa
26Real gases deviate from ideal behavior
- Because, at lower temperatures, gas particles are
attracted to one another - And, gas particles have a finite volume (ideal
gases have no molecular attractions, and the
particles have no volume) - The ideal gas law works well for gases with large
volumes and at low pressures