GAS LAWS!.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
GAses.
Advertisements

Gas Laws Chapters
Gases.
Chapter 11: Behavior of Gases
General Chemistry Gas Laws
Chapter 9 Fluid Mechanics
The Gas Laws.
Gases.
Properties of Gases.
The Gas Laws Chemistry Dr. May Gaseous Matter Indefinite volume and no fixed shape Indefinite volume and no fixed shape Particles move independently.
Mole concept applied to gases
I. Physical Properties 9 (A) describe and calculate the relations between volume, pressure, number of moles, and temperature for an ideal gas as described.
The Gas Laws Chapter 14.
Gas Laws.
Charles Law V 1 = V 2 P constant T 1 T 2 T 1 T 2 Boyles Law P 1 V 1 = P 2 V 2 T constant Combined P 1 V 1 = P 2 V 2 T 1 T 2 T 1 T 2 Gay-Lussacs Law P 1.
Gas Laws. What are gas laws??? What are gas laws??? Study of the relationships between pressure, volume, temperature, and amount of gases in a system.
Gas Law Properties of gases: Kinetic Theory Compressible Expand
GASES Chapter 14.
Gas Laws Lecture.
Gas Laws.
Kinetic Molecular Theory of Gases and the Gas Laws
Year 11 DP Chemistry Rob Slider
Gas Laws Lesson 2.
The Ideal Gas Law PV = nRT.
Chemistry I Mr. Patel SWHS
Ch – Ideal Gases -Avogadro’s Law (extension) -STP & molar volume of gas (review) -Ideal Gas Law (most important)
The Gas Laws You can predict how pressure, volume, temperature, and number of gas particles are related to each other based on the molecular model of a.
The Gas Laws and Stoichiometry
Gases.
Properties of Gases & The gas Laws
Gas Variables. Pressure 1. Caused by collisions between molecules and the walls of container. 2. Force per unit area; changing force of collisions or.
Not so long ago, in a chemistry lab far far away… May the FORCE/area be with you.
GASES Chapter 14.
GASES. General Properties of Gases There is a lot of “free” space in a gas. Gases can be expanded infinitely. Gases fill containers uniformly and completely.
Section 2 – The Gas Laws Scientists have been studying physical properties of gases for hundreds of years. In 1662, Robert Boyle discovered that gas.
GASES Chemistry Properties of Gases Characteristics of Gases Fill their containers completely Have mass Can be compressed Exert pressure Mix rapidly.
Honors Chem Chapters 10, 11, and 12. Kinetic Molecular Theory (KMT) Molecules are constantly in motion and collide with one another and the wall of a.
Chapter 14 – Gases Kinetic Molecular Theory (KMT) Defn – describes the behavior of gases in terms of particle motion Defn – describes the behavior of.
Chapter 12: The Behavior of Gases. Think of Chem 1A…. Mrs. Richards, Mr. Mazurek, Ms. Knick, Ms. Olin….. What do you remember about gases????
Gas Laws.
Aim: What are the properties of Gases?. Compressibility Compressibility is measure of how much volume decreases under increased pressure. Gases are easily.
CHEMISTRY THE BEHAVIOR OF GASES. VARIABLES THAT DESCRIBE A GAS Compressibility: a measure of how much the volume of matter decreases under pressure.
Gas Laws.
The Gas Laws. Units- are used to identify each variable Volume- mL, L, cm 3 Temperature- if given in °C convert to Kelvin- K Pressure- atm, torr, mmHg,
Ideal Gas Law PV=nRT Kinetic Molecular Theory 1. Gases have low density 2. Gases have elastic collisions 3. Gases have continuous random motion. 4. Gases.
Gas!!! It’s Everywhere!!!!.
COMBINED AND IDEAL GAS LAWS. COMBINED GAS LAW  Do variables remain constant for gases???  Temperature, pressure, and volume are CONSTANTLY changing.
Behavior of Gases  Gases behave much differently than liquids and solids and thus, have different laws.  Because gas molecules have no forces keeping.
The Gas Laws A Tutorial on the Behavior of Gases..
CHEMISTRY THE BEHAVIOR OF GASES. VARIABLES THAT DESCRIBE A GAS Compressibility: a measure of how much the volume of matter decreases under pressure.
KINETIC MOLECULAR THEORY Physical Properties of Gases: Gases have mass Gases are easily compressed Gases completely fill their containers (expandability)
Gay (that French dude) Bubble bubble, Boyle ‘n trouble
Gas Laws. 1. Kinetic Molecular Theory Ideal Gases :  Gas particles do not attract or repel each other.  Gas particles are much smaller than the distances.
Gases Chapter 11. Kinetic Theory and Gas Properties The kinetic theory assumes that –Volume of gas particles is insignificant –There is space between.
Aim: What are the properties of Gases? DO NOW: Fill in the blanks. (increase or decrease for each blank) 1. As the volume of a gas ____________, the pressure.
IDEAL GAS LAW. Variables of a Gas We have already learned that a sample of gas can be defined by 3 variables:  Pressure  Volume  Temperature.
Gases. Ideal Gases Ideal gases are imaginary gases that perfectly fit all of the assumptions of the kinetic molecular theory.  Gases consist of tiny.
Unit 9: The Gas Laws Chapters 13 and 14. Demo – Vacuum Pump Can water boil at room temperature? Why/why not? – Water boils when vapor pressure = atmospheric.
Chemistry – Chapter 14.  Kinetic Theory assumes the following concepts:  Gas particles don’t attract or repel each other  Gas particles are much smaller.
Chapter 11 Gases Pages The Gas Laws Robert Boyle discovered that doubling the __________ on a sample of gas at a constant temperature (because.
Gases. The Nature of Gases  1. Gases have mass –A car tire weighs more with air in it than it would completely empty.  2. It is easy to compress a gas.
DO NOW List 5 gases that you can think of without the aide of a book. Classify these gases are either elements, compounds or mixtures. Explain your classifications.
GAS LAWS Boyle’s Charles’ Gay-Lussac’s Combined Gas Ideal Gas Dalton’s Partial Pressure.
The Behavior of Gases.
Gases I. Physical Properties.
The Behavior of Gases.
Mean (Average) The mean is the total of all of the values divided by the number of values Example: Find the mean of 2, 3, 7, 7, 4 Step 1:
Gas Laws and Nature of Gases
Ideal Boyles Lussac Charles
TEKS 9A & 9C Gas Laws.
Presentation transcript:

GAS LAWS!

COMPRESSIBILITY Compressibility is a measure of how much the VOLUME of matter can DECREASE under pressure.

COMPRESSIBILITY OF GASES According to the KMT gas particles are so SMALL in relation to the distances between them that their individual volumes are virtually insignificant. This means that there is a lot of EMPTY space between the individual gas particles. This space between the particles explains why gases can be COMPRESSED.

VARIABLES THAT DESCRIBE GASES Temperature (T) (KELVIN) PRESSURE (P) (atmosphere) Volume (V) (mL) Number of MOLES (N)

TEMPERATURE Gas laws use temperature in the SI unit of KELVIN. TEMPERATURE= measure of the AVERAGE kinetic energy of Particles Converting CELSIUS to Kelvin: Kelvin= Celsius Temperature +273 EX: What is 16 degrees Celsius in Kelvin?

TEMPERATURE (T) Gas laws use temperature in the SI unit of KELVIN. Converting Celsius Temperatures to Kelvin: Kelvin= Celsius Temperature +273 EX: What is 16 degrees Celsius in Kelvin? Kelvin= 16+273 = 289

PRESSURE (P) Pressure is caused by MOVING molecules hitting container walls PRESSURE can be measured in atmospheres, torr’s, mmHG, kPa, or psi The SI unit for pressure is ATMOSPHERES. Conversion of Pressure: 1 atm= 760 torr= 760mmHG= 101.3 kPa= 14.7psi

PRESSURE CONVERSION EXAMPLES How many torrs are in 2 atm? How many HGmm are in 2 atm? How many atm are in 100 kPa?

PRESSURE CONVERSION ANSWERS How many torrs are in 2 atm? 1520 torr How many HGmm are in 2 atm? 1520 Hgmm How many atm are in 50 kPa? .494 atm

VOLUME (V) Volume is measured in MILLILITERS. Volume is the amount of SPACE occupied by a substance.

NUMBER OF MOLES (n) The number of MOLES represents the number of PARTICLES contained in a system. 6.02X 10 23 particles = 1 mole 22.4 L= 1 mole

IDEAL GAS LAW! The ideal gas law is the mathematical relationship among pressure (P), volume (V), temperature(T) , and the number of moles(n) of a gas: PV = nRT

WHAT IS ‘R’? “R” is the IDEAL GAS CONSTANT. The UNIT of pressure need to match up! R = 0.0821 L • atm mol • K R = 8.31 L • kPa R = 62.4 L • mmHg

Sample Problem  What volume will 2.50 mol of hydrogen (H2) occupy at -20.0 °C and 1.5 atm?  

Solve… Use the Ideal Gas Law: PV = nRT Solve for V: V = nRT P

Substitute: V = 2.50 mol X 0.0821 L atm X 253 K 1.5 atm mol K Don’t forget to convert temperature to Kelvin!!! V = 2.50 mol X 0.0821 L atm X 253 K 1.5 atm mol K

Final Answer V = 34.6 L

PART 2!

BOYLES LAW PRESSURE vs. VOLUME As one increase the other decreases. This is an INVERSE relationship.

BOYLES LAW GRAPH As the Volume decreases the pressure increases.

BOYLES LAW EQUATION k = VxP k is a CONSTANT for a certain sample of gas that depends on the mass of the gas and the temperature.

BOYLES LAW EQUATION RATIO If we have a set of new conditions for the same sample of gas, they will have the same k so we can set up a RATIO.

BOYLES LAW EXAMPLE

BOYLES LAW EXAMPLE Consider a 1.53-L sample of gaseous SO2 at a pressure of 5.6 x 103 Pa. If the pressure is changed to 1.5 x 104 Pa at constant temperature, what will be the new volume of the gas?

CHARLES LAW TEMPERATURE vs. VOLUME Charles Law states that the volume of a fixed mass of gas varies directly with temperature at a constant pressure.

Charles’ Law DIRECT Relationship: As temperature increases the volume increases.

CHARLES LAW EQUATION V= kT or k=V/T K is a CONSTANT for certain sample of gas that depends on the mass of gas and its pressure.

CHARLES LAW EQUATION- RATIO If we have a set of new conditions for the same sample of gas they will have the same k so we can use a ratio to solve for our variable. V1/T1 = k = V2/ T2 V1/T1 = V2/ T2

CHARLES LAW EXAMPLE A gas with a volume of 600 mL has a temperature of 30 0C. At constant pressure the gas is heated until the gas expands to 1,200 mL. What is the new temperature of the gas if the pressure remains constant?

CHARLES LAW ANSWER The first step is to convert the temperature from Celsius to Kelvin: 273 + 30 = 303 K Rearrange Charles’ law to solve for the new temperature: T2= V2 T1 / V1 T2 = 1200mL X 303 K = 2 X 303K = 600mL T2 = 606K

GAY-LUSSAC’s GAS LAW Lussac’s Gas Law states that if the TEMPERATURE of a gas is increased, and the volume is held constant, the pressure of the gas will also INCREASE.

Direct Relationship Gay-Lussac's Law is a DIRECT relationship when one increases the other also increases. Pressure TEMPERATURE

GAY LUSSACS EQUATION P ÷ T = k If we have two sets of data for the same gas we can set the equations EQUAL to each other. We know this: P1 ÷ T1 = k And we know this: P2 ÷ T2 = k Since k = k, we can conclude that: P1 ÷ T1 = P2 ÷ T2

GAY LUSSACS EXAMPLE 10.0 L of a gas is found to exert 97.0 kPa at 25.0°C. What would be the required temperature (in Celsius) to change the pressure to standard pressure( 101.3 kPa)?

GAY LUSSACS STEPS STEP 1: Change 25.0°C to 298.0 K and remember that standard pressure in kPa is 101.325. STEP 2: Insert values into the equation. STEP 3: Solve for x

GAY LUSSACS ANSWER The answer is 311.3 K, but the question asks for Celsius, so you subtract 273 to get the final answer of 38.3°C. BONUS: Can you convert the temperature to KELVIN?

COMBINED GAS LAW BOYLES LAW, Charles law, and Gay Lussacs Law can be combined to create a COMBINED GAS LAW. The Combined gas Law equation is: P1V1 / T1 = P2V2 / T2 P= Pressure V= VOLUME T= Temperature.

……..Now It’s time for you to practice the different kinds of Gas Laws in your Gas Laws Packet. If you don’t finish in class- It’s HOMEWORK!