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Last Unit of Chemistry! (not the last lecture, but hey it’s something)

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Presentation on theme: "Last Unit of Chemistry! (not the last lecture, but hey it’s something)"— Presentation transcript:

1 Last Unit of Chemistry! (not the last lecture, but hey it’s something)

2 The Gas Laws Boyle’s law - pressure of a fixed amount of gas at a constant temperature is inversely proportional to the volume of the gas. (volume goes up, pressure goes down) at constant temperature P1V1 = P2V2

3 The Gas Laws Charles’s Law - the volume of a gas maintained at constant pressure is directly proportional to the absolute temperature of the gas. (at constant pressure)

4 Gay Lussac’s Law – the pressure exerted by a gas is directly related to the temperature when moles and volume are held constant.

5 The Gas Laws Avogadro’s law - the volume of a sample of gas is directly proportional to the number of moles in the sample at constant temperature and pressure.

6 The Gas Laws The combined gas law can be used to solve problems where any or all of the variables changes.

7 PVnRT4LYFE! The ideal gas equation (below) describes the relationship among the four variables P, V, n, and T. PV = nRT An ideal gas is a hypothetical sample of gas whose pressure-volume-temperature behavior is predicted accurately by the ideal gas equation.

8 The Ideal Gas Equation The gas constant (R) is the proportionality constant and its value and units depend on the units in which P and V are expressed. PV = nRT

9 The Ideal Gas Equation Standard Temperature and Pressure (STP) are a special set of conditions where: Pressure is 1 atm = kpa = 760 mmHg = 760 Torr Temperature is 0°C ( K) When converting from one unit of pressure to another, use the numbers above and factor label method. kpa 760 mmHg 760 Torr 1 atm atm atm

10 Pressure units 5.34 atm to mmHg 97.3 kpa to Torr
5.34 atm x 760 mmHg = mmHg atm 97.3 kpa to Torr 97.3 kpa x atm x 760 Torr = kpa atm

11 Dalton’s law of partial pressure - the total pressure exerted by a gas mixture is the sum of the partial pressures exerted by each component of the mixture:

12 Dalton’s law Not an equation like the rest of them, but more of a concept Works because we are saying that all gasses, regardless of kind, behave the same and therefor all take up the same space. Therefore, if a pressure is made of 10 moles of ten gasses, each one exerts 1/10th of the total pressure. If 5.4 atm is made up of 2 moles of fluorine gas, and 3 moles of chlorine gas, how much pressure do each exert?

13 Gas Mixtures Determine the partial pressures and the total pressure in a 2.50-L vessel containing the following mixture of gases at 15.8°C: mol He, mol H2, and mol Ne. Solution: Step 1: Since each gas behaves independently, calculate the partial pressure of each using the ideal gas equation:

14 Gas Mixtures Determine the partial pressures and the total pressure in a 2.50-L vessel containing the following mixture of gases at 15.8°C: mol He, mol H2, and mol Ne. Solution: Step 2: Use the equation below to calculate total pressure. Ptotal = atm atm atm = 2.17 atm


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