Using The Ideal Gas Law Gas Stoichiometry. PV T VnVn PV nT Ideal Gas Law = k UNIVERSAL GAS CONSTANT R=0.0821 L  atm/mol  K R=8.31 L  kPa/mol  K =

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Ch Gases Gas Stoichiometry.
Advertisements

Ch Gases II. Ideal Gas Law Ideal Gas Law and Gas Stoichiometry.
Using PV = nRT (Honors) P = Pressure V = Volume T = Temperature N = number of moles R is a constant, called the Ideal Gas Constant Instead of learning.
Ideal Gas Law & Gas Stoichiometry
Physical Properties Gases. Kinetic Molecular Theory b Particles in an ideal gas… have no volume have elastic collisions are in constant, random, straight-line.
III. Ideal Gas Law (p , ) Ch. 10 & 11 - Gases.
Think About This… Gas Atmosphere This is a U-Tube Manometer. The red stuff is a liquid that moves based on the pressures on each end of the tube. Based.
C. Johannesson I. Physical Properties (p ) Ch. 10 & 11 - Gases.
III. Ideal Gas Law Gases Gases. V n A. Avogadro’s Principle b Equal volumes of gases contain equal numbers of moles at constant temp & pressure true for.
Properties and Measuring Variables Gases Gases. A. Kinetic Molecular Theory b Particles in an ideal gas… have no volume. have elastic collisions. are.
Topic 10 Gases III. Ideal Gas Law.
Gas Laws Practice Problems 1) Work out each problem on scratch paper. 2) Click ANSWER to check your answer. 3) Click NEXT to go on to the next problem.
Ideal Gas Law & Gas Stoichiometry
I. Physical Properties (p ) Ch. 10 & 11 - Gases.
III. Ideal Gas Law Gases. PV T VnVn PV nT A. Ideal Gas Law = k UNIVERSAL GAS CONSTANT R= L  atm/mol  K R=8.315 dm 3  kPa/mol  K = R You don’t.
Ideal Gas Law & Gas Stoichiometry. Avogadro’s Principle Equal volumes of gases contain equal numbers of moles at constant temp & pressure true for any.
 Bellwork: What is the volume, in liters, of mol of oxygen gas at 20.0ºC and atm pressure? PV = nRT V = ? n = mol T = 20ºC = 293.
Ch. 10 Gases. Characteristics of Gases b Gases expand to fill any container. random motion, no attraction b Gases are fluids (like liquids). no attraction.
A theory concerning the thermodynamic behavior of matter, especially the relationships among pressure, volume, and temperature in gases. Kinetic Molecular.
Gas Stoichiometry. Molar Volume of Gases The volume occupied by one mole of a gas at STP (standard temperature and pressure) –Equal to 22.4 L / mol –Can.
MOLAR VOLUME. molar volume What is the volume of a gas at STP, if it contains 10.4 moles? What is the volume of carbon dioxide gas (STP) if the.
Ideal Gas Law (Equation):
Ideal Gas Law. For every problem we have done, we also could have used the ideal gas law. On the test, you will have to do a couple of problems with the.
I. Physical Properties Ch Gases. Kinetic Molecular Theory b Particles in an ideal gas… have no volume. have elastic collisions. are in constant,
I. The Gas Laws Ch Gases. A. Boyle’s Law b The pressure and volume of a gas are inversely related at constant mass & temp P V P 1 V 1 = P 2 V 2.
III. Ideal Gas Law (p , ) Ch. 10 & 11 - Gases.
C. Johannesson III. Ideal Gas Law (p , ) Ch. 10 & 11 - Gases.
III. Ideal Gas Law and Dalton’s Law of Partial Pressure Gases.
I. Physical Properties Gases. A. Kinetic Molecular Theory b Particles in an ideal gas… have no volume. have elastic collisions. are in constant, random,
C. Johannesson Ch. 10 & 11 - Gases Gas Stoichiometry at Non- STP Conditions.
Chapter 11 – Ideal Gas Law and Gas Stoichiometry.
Ideal Gases. Ideal Gas vs. Real Gas Gases are “most ideal”… at low P & high T in nonpolar atoms/molecules Gases are “real”… Under low T & high P when.
Ch. 10 & 11 - Gases Ideal Gas Law C. Johannesson.
Ch Gases.  To describe a gas fully you need to state 4 measurable quantities:  Volume  Temperature  Number of molecules  pressure.
Ch Gases III. Gas Stoichiometry at Non-STP Conditions and the last gas laws!
C. Johannesson CHARACTERISTICS OF GASES Gases expand to fill any container. random motion, no attraction Gases are fluids (like liquids). no attraction.
Ideal Gas Law Van der Waals combined Boyle’s and Charles’ Laws.
II. Ideal Gas Law Ch Gases. A. Ideal Gas Law P 1 V 1 P 2 V 2 T 1 n 1 T 2 n 2 = This is where we ended with the Combined Gas Law: Play video!
The Gas Laws Ch. 14- Gases. Boyle’s Law P V PV = k Pressure and Volume are inversely proportional. As Volume increased, pressure decreases.
Chapter 10: Gases STP *standard temp and pressure temp= K, 0ºC pressure= 101.3kPa, 1atm, 760mmHg, 760torr Problems Convert: a) 0.357atm  torr b)
Ideal Gas Law & Gas Stoichiometry. Avogadro’s Principle Equal volumes of gases contain equal numbers of moles at constant temp & pressure true for any.
Ideal Gas Law Ch. 10 & 11 - Gases. V n A. Avogadro’s Principle b Equal volumes of gases contain equal numbers of moles at constant temp & pressure true.
V  1/P (Boyle’s law) V  T (Charles’s law) P  T (Gay-Lussac’s law) V  n (Avogadro’s law) So far we’ve seen… PV nT = R ideal gas constant: R =
I. Physical Properties I. Gases I. Gases. Nature of Gases b Gases have mass. b They can be compressed. b They completely fill their containers. b Representative.
GASES “ UP, UP AND AWWWAAAAYYYYYYYY” KINETIC THEORY OF GASES 1.A gas consists of small particles that move rapidly in straight lines. 2.have essentially.
Ideal Gas Law & Gas Stoichiometry Work out each problem in the 3-step format. Gases notes #4 - Ideal Gas Law & Gas Stoichiometry.pptx.
Gases I. Physical Properties.
Bellwork: What is the volume, in liters, of mol of oxygen gas at 20.0ºC and atm pressure? V = ? n = mol T = 20ºC = 293 K P =
IV. Gas Stoichiometry at Non-STP Conditions (p )
Ideal Gas Law (p ) please read the text first
IV. Gas Stoichiometry at Non-STP Conditions (p )
III. Ideal Gas Law (p , in class)
Bellwork: What is the volume, in liters, of mol of oxygen gas at 20.0ºC and atm pressure? V = ? n = mol T = 20ºC = 293 K P =
Gas Stoichiometry Non-STP Conditions.
Ch Gases I. Physical Properties.
Ch. 10 & 11 - Gases III. Ideal Gas Law (p , )
IV. Gas Stoichiometry at Non-STP Conditions (p )
Ideal Gas Law (Equation):
IV. Gas Stoichiometry at Non-STP Conditions (p )
Topic 10 Gases III. Ideal Gas Law.
Ch. 13 Gases III. Ideal Gas Law (p ).
Ch. 10 & 11 - Gases III. Ideal Gas Law (p , )
Gas Stoichiometry at Non-STP Conditions
IV. Gas Stoichiometry at Non-STP Conditions (p )
Ch. 13 – Gases Gas Stoichiometry.
III. Ideal Gas Law (p , in class)
Gas Stoichiometry Moles  Liters of a Gas: Non-STP
Gas Stoichiometry Moles  Liters of a Gas: Non-STP
III. Ideal Gas Law (p , in class)
Chem Get HW stamped off Work on STP Gas Stoichiometry Warm Up Problems
Presentation transcript:

using The Ideal Gas Law Gas Stoichiometry

PV T VnVn PV nT Ideal Gas Law = k UNIVERSAL GAS CONSTANT R= L  atm/mol  K R=8.31 L  kPa/mol  K = R

Ideal Gas Law UNIVERSAL GAS CONSTANT R= L  atm/mol  K R=8.31 L  kPa/mol  K PV=nRT

GIVEN: P = ? atm n = mol T = 16°C = 289 K V = 3.25 L R = L  atm/mol  K WORK: PV = nRT P(3.25)=(0.412)(0.0821)(289) L mol L  atm/mol  K K P = 3.01 atm Ideal Gas Law b Calculate the pressure in atmospheres of mol of He at 16°C & occupying 3.25 L. IDEAL GAS LAW

GIVEN: V = ?V = ? n = 85 g T = 25°C = 298 K P = kPa R = 8.31 L  kPa/mol  K Ideal Gas Law b Find the volume of 85 g of O 2 at 25°C and kPa. = 2.66 mol WORK: 85 g 1 mol = 2.66 mol g PV = nRT (104.5)V=(2.66) (8.31) (298) kPa mol L  kPa/mol  K K V = L IDEAL GAS LAW

Gas Stoichiometry use at non-STP Conditions

Gas Stoichiometry b Moles  Liters of a Gas STP  use 22.4 L/mol (Avogadro’s Law) Non-STP  use ideal gas law b Non- STP Problems Given liters of gas?  start with ideal gas law Looking for liters of gas?  start with stoichiometry conversion

1 mol CaCO g CaCO 3 Gas Stoichiometry Problem b What volume of CO 2 forms from 5.25 g of CaCO 3 at 103 kPa & 25ºC? 5.25 g CaCO 3 = mol CO 2 CaCO 3  CaO + CO 2 1 mol CO 2 1 mol CaCO g? L non-STP Looking for liters: Start with stoichiometry and calculate moles of CO 2. Plug this into the Ideal Gas Law to find liters. x x

WORK: PV = nRT (103 kPa)V =(0.052mol)(8.31 L  kPa/mol  K )(298K) V = 1.25 L CO 2 Gas Stoichiometry Problem b What volume of CO 2 forms from 5.25 g of CaCO 3 at 103 kPa & 25ºC? GIVEN: P = 103 kPa V = ? n = mol T = 25°C = 298 K R = 8.31 L  kPa/mol  K

WORK: PV = nRT (97.3 kPa) (15.0 L) = n (8.31 L  kPa/mol  K ) (294K) n = mol O 2 Gas Stoichiometry Problem b How many grams of Al 2 O 3 are formed from 15.0 L of O 2 at 97.3 kPa & 21°C? GIVEN: P = 97.3 kPa V = 15.0 L n = ?n = ? T = 21°C = 294 K R = 8.31 L  kPa/mol  K 4 Al + 3 O 2  2 Al 2 O L non-STP ? g Given liters: Start with Ideal Gas Law and calculate moles of O 2. NEXT 

2 mol Al 2 O 3 3 mol O 2 Gas Stoichiometry Problem b How many grams of Al 2 O 3 are formed from 15.0 L of O 2 at 97.3 kPa & 21°C? mol O 2 = g Al 2 O 3 4 Al + 3 O 2  2 Al 2 O g Al 2 O 3 1 mol Al 2 O L non-STP ? g Use stoich to convert moles of O 2 to grams Al 2 O 3. x x