Gases: 5/75 Questions in Multiple Choice Almost Every Year in Free Response Section
Gases: 5/75 Questions in Multiple Choice Almost Every Year in Free Response Section
Gases: 5/75 Questions in Multiple Choice Almost Every Year in Free Response Section
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5.1 Gas Pressure
• Gases exert pressure on any surface they
come in contact with.
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Boyle’s Law
P↓
P↑
V↑
V↓
3.0 L 2.0 L Ar
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He 145 mmHg 355 mmHg
Answer
First we need to find the total volume of the
bulbs:
Vtotal = Va +Vb = 3+2=5
Next we need to do Boyles’s law twice, once
for each bulb to find P of each gas.
P1 V1 = P2 V2
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Bonus
Convert 229 mmHg to atm
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Charles's Law
• At constant pressure the volume of gas is
direct proportional to its temperature.
V1 = V2 Note: Temp is ALWAYS in
Kelvin!!!!
T1 T2
T↓ T↑
V↓ V↑ 15
Graphical Explanation
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Charles's Law Example
A balloon is filled to a volume of
7.00 x 102ml at a temperature of 20.0◦C. The
balloon is then cooled at a constant
pressure to a temperature of 1.0x102K.
What is the final volume of the balloon?
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Answer
20C + 273 = 293 K
7.00 x 102ml = V2
293 K 1.0x102K.
V2= 238.9 ml
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Avogadro’s Law
• Equal volumes of gas at the same
temperature and pressure contain equal
numbers of moles.
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Avogadro’s Law
V↓ V↑
n↑
n↓
At constant temperature and Pressure the
Volume of a gas is directly proportional to
the number of moles.
V1 = V2 21
n n
Example
• How many liters of O2 gas are required to
prepare 100 L of CO2 gas by the following
reaction.
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Answer
V1 = V2
n1 n2
100 = V2
2 1
V2= 50L
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Homework
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Combined Gas Law
• This is used when
nothing is constant in
an experiment.
P V T
P1V1 = P2V
T1 T2 CONSTANT ↑ ↑
CONSTANT
↑ ↓
P = atm
CONSTANT
V=L ↑ ↑
T=K
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Example
A gas is contained in a cylinder with a
temperature of 281 K and a volume of 2.1
ml at a pressure of 6.4 atm. The gas is
heated to a new temperature of 298 K and
the pressure decreases to 1 atm.
What is the new volume of the gas.
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Answer
P1V1 = P2V2
T1 T2
P1= 6.4atm
6.4 (2.1) = 1 (V2)
V1 = 2.1 ml
281 298
T1 = 281 k
P2= 1 atm
V2= ? V2 = 14ml
T2 = 298 K
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STP
• Standard Temperature and Pressure
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Answer
• P1V1/T1 = P2V2/T2
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Ideal Gas Law 10.4
Ideal gas: a hypothetical gas whose pressure
(atm), volume (L), and temperature (K) behave
as predicted every time. (Perfect like each and
everyone of you!)
gas constant:
R= 0.0821 L x Atm/mol x K
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Example
• A 50.0L cylinder of acetylene C2H2 has a
pressure of 17.1 atm at 21C . What is the
mass of acetylene in the cylinder.
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Answer
PV = nRT
21 + 273 = 294 K
17.1 (50.0) = n (0.0821) (294)
n = 35.4 mol
Need answer in grams
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Answer
• 51 g/mol
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Dalton’s Law of Partial Pressures
• The total pressure of a mixture of gases is
the sum of the pressure of all of the gases.
• Ptotal = P1 + P2+ P3 ……
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• Partial pressure of a gas is directly proportional
to the number of moles of gas.
Pa = (Ptotal) (Xa)
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Mole Fraction (X1)
• The ratio of the number of moles of a
given component in a mixture to the total
number of moles in the mixture.
X1 = n1
n1 +n2 +n3
n = moles = PV/RT
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Kinetic Molecular Theory
• Gases consist of large numbers of molecules
that are continuously in random motion.
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Kinetic Molecular Theory
• Average kinetic energy of gas is constant
at constant temperature.
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Kinetic Molecular Theory
• The theory gives us an understating of both
pressure and temperature at a molecular level.
3
KE nRT
2
R = gas constant 8.31 joules/mol-K
(0.0821 L x Atm/mol x K)
n = # moles
T = temp in K
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Average kinetic energy of a single
gas molecule at a given temparture
1 2 3RT
KE mv Vrms
2 M
m = mass of molecule in kg
٧ = is the speed of the molecules in m/s
K.E = joules
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Maxwell-Boltzmann Distribution
Function
• Figure 1 shows the
Maxwell-Boltzmann
Distribution of speeds for
a certain gas at a certain
temperature, such as
nitrogen at 298 K. The
speed at the top of the
curve is called the most
probable speed because
the largest number of
molecules have that
speed.
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Maxwell-Boltzmann Distribution is
affected by temperature
• At lower temperatures,
the molecules have less
energy. Therefore, the
speeds of the molecules
are lower and the
distribution has a smaller
range. As the
temperature of the
molecules increases, the
distribution flattens out.
Because the molecules
have greater energy at
higher temperature, the
molecules are moving
faster.
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5.7 Effusion – Diffusion
• Effusion:
The rate at which a gas
Is able to escape
through a tiny hole.
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Grahams law of effusion
Used to compare the avg, speed (rate of
effusion) of two different gasses in a sample.
Rate1 M2
Rate2 M1
M = molar mass of gas
r = rate of effusion of a gas or avg. speed of
molecule. 49
Diffusion
Diffusion:
the spread of one
substance throughout
a second substance.
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Van der Waals Equation
n2a
P 2 V nb nRT
v
• P = atm T = absolute temp of gas K
• V=L R = 0.0821 l-atm/mol-K
• n = moles
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Van der Waals equation (yes 2 a’s )
• At ↑pressure there is less space between
gas molecules so the volume of the
molecules themselves becomes more
relevant.
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• At low temperatures gases become VERY tightly
packed due to less K.E. ideal way because with
out high K. E they become susceptible to
attractive forces between gas molecules which
could cause the molecules to condense.
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AP Examples
Q1 Which of the following gases would you expect
to have the largest value for van Der Waals
constant b?
H2 N2 CH4 C2H6 C3H8
H2 N2 CH4 CO2
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Answer
• Q1 b measures the size of molecules so
the largest molecule would have the
largest b C3H8
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