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Read Section 6.5 before viewing the slide show.. Unit 23 Gases Five Premises of Kinetic Molecular Theory (6.5)

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Presentation on theme: "Read Section 6.5 before viewing the slide show.. Unit 23 Gases Five Premises of Kinetic Molecular Theory (6.5)"— Presentation transcript:

1 Read Section 6.5 before viewing the slide show.

2 Unit 23 Gases Five Premises of Kinetic Molecular Theory (6.5)

3 The Kinetic-Molecular Theory of Gases Our understanding of gases is based on a model called the kinetic-molecular theory of gases. The model is based on five postulates and explains well the pressure-volume-temperature behavior observed for gases. The five postulates are: Particles of a gas (could be molecules or individual atoms) are in constant rapid motion and move in straight lines. Particles of a gas are tiny compared with the distances between them. Particles of a gas are very far apart and thus the intermolecular forces are not important – there is little attraction or repulsion between the particles of a gas. Particles of a gas collide with one another and the energy is conserved in every collision. Temperature is a measure of the average kinetic energy (energy of motion) of the gas particles. On the ensuing slide you will use an animation to visually look at implications of these postulates.

4 Gases at the Particle Level First, let’s get an appreciation at the particle level. Go to the site: http://phet.colorado.edu/en/simulation/gas-properties and click on either the Download button or the Run Now button. An image similar to that to the right will appear. http://phet.colorado.edu/en/simulation/gas-properties Use your mouse cursor to raise the pump handle as high as it will go and then lower it. (Press the Alt and Tab keys simultaneously to toggle between the simuulation and these questions.) Watch the particles move around the container for a short while to get an impression of the particle motion. Do the particles move in straight lines between collisions? Does the motion appear to be random? Do you see any instances of a particle being “aware” of another particle other than during collision – do particles curve at all in their motion or do they stick together?


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