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Use of the Ideal Gas Equation

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1 Use of the Ideal Gas Equation
What volume does 1 mole of gas occupy at STP (Standard Temperature and Pressure)? STP corresponds to T = 273 K and P = 1 atm PV = nRT (1 atm) x V = (1 mole) x ( L atm mol-1 K-1) x ( K) V = L or Pa x V = (1 mol) x ( J K-1 mol-1) x ( K) V = m3 = L

2 Scuba Diving A scuba diver’s tank contains 0.3 kg O2 in a volume of 2.32 L. Estimate the gas pressure at 5 °C and the volume it would occupy at 30 °C at atmospheric pressure. 0.3 kg = 300 g ≡ (300 g) / (32 g mol-1) = mole Hence at 5 °C (278K), P = (9.375 mol) x ( atm L K-1 mol-1) x (278 K) (2.32) L = 92.2 atm V = (9.375 mol) x ( atm L K-1 mol-1) x (308 K) 1 atm = 237 L

3 More Calculations So what is the number density of molecules at atmospheric pressure (the number of molecules per unit volume)? 1 mole occupies L. Hence at STP there are x 1025 molecules m-3 or x 1019 cm-3 So what is the average distance between molecules? 2.687 x 1025 m-3 - hence each molecule has an effective volume available to it of (1 / x 1025) = 3.72 x m3. Take the cube root of both sides of this equation: (3.72 x 10-26)1/3 = 3.34 x 10-9 m = 3.3 nm

4 So Our Picture of a Gas Becomes ….
e.g., air at STP Average distance between molecules ~3 nm ~0.15 nm N2 bond length

5 Density of a Gas Because PV = nRT and n = m/M (mass / rel mol mass) we can write: PV = mRT / M Or density = m/V = PM / RT e.g., calculate the density of H2 at 1.32 atm and -45 ºC density = (1.32 atm) x (2.02 g mol-1) ( atm L K-1 mol-1) x (228 K) = g L-1 (care with units)

6 Dalton’s Law of Partial Pressures
Very often we encounter mixtures of gases rather than pure gases (e.g., air contains N2, O2, Ar, CO2 etc.) The partial pressure of a gas in a mixture is defined to be the pressure it would exert if it were the only gas present. According to Dalton’s Law The total pressure of a mixture of gases is the sum of the partial pressures of the individual gases. So, e.g., for air: Pair = PN2 + PO2 + PCO2 + PAr + …..

7 Sample Problem Involving Partial Pressures
If we have 2 moles of H2, 4 moles of O2, and 6 moles of He in a 5 liter vessel at 27 C, determine the partial pressure of each gas and the total pressure of the mixture. P(total) = = atm Solution: Convert the temperature to Kelvin: K = = 300 K Use the ideal gas law for each gas: P(H2) = nRT / V = (2 moles H2) ( liter-atm / mol-K) (300 K) / 5 liters = 9.85 atm P(O2) = nRT / V = (4 moles O2) ( liter-atm / mol-K) ( 300 K) / 5 liters = 19.7 atm P(He) = nRT / V = ( 6 moles He) ( liter-atm / mol-K) ( 300 K) / 5 liters = atm


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