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Gases Chapter 13 Pg. 372402

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Title: Gases Chapter 13 Pg. 372402


1
Gases Chapter 13 Pg. 372-402
2
Goal
  • To learn about the behavior of gases both on
    molecular and macroscopic levels.

3
General Characteristics of Gases
  • Uniformly fills any container.
  • Mixes completely with any other gas.
  • Exerts pressure on its surroundings.

4
Force mass X acceleration
  • To understand pressure, one has to understand
    force.
  • Weight your mass X acceleration due to gravity
  • Mr. Yoos force
  • F 87 kg X 9.8 m/s2
  • F 852.6 kg m /s2 850 N

Acceleration due to gravity
5
Pressure Force / Area
  • If Mr. Yoos weighs 850 N on earth, and I am
    standing on a scale that is 0.5m X 0.5m or 0.25m2
    , the pressure I exert is

6
Lets Say Mr. Yoos is Wearing High Heels
  • Total area for the heels 1X10-4m2. The force is
    850 N. What is the pressure?
  • 1N/m2 1 Pascal or 1 Pa

7
Air Exerts Pressure
  • The standard atmosphere is equal to 101,325 Pa.
  • 1 atm 101,325 Pa
  • 1 atm 760 torr 760 mm Hg

8
Barometer
9
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10
The Gas Laws
  • Boyles Law- the pressure exerted by a gas is
    inversely proportional to the volume the gas
    occupies if the temperature remains constant.

11
Boyles Law
  • Example A gas which has a pressure of 1.3 atm
    occupies a volume of 27 L. What volume will the
    gas occupy if the pressure is increased to 3.9
    atm at constant temperature?

12
Boyles Law
13
Charless Law
  • At constant pressure, the volume of a gas is
    directly proportional to the temperature (in
    Kelvins) of the gas.

14
Charless Law
15
  • Example A gas at 30.00C and 1.00 atm occupies a
    volume of 0.842 L. What volume will the gas
    occupy at 60.00C and 1.00 atm?

16
Avogadros Law
  • For a gas at constant temperature and pressure
    the volume is directly proportional to the number
    of moles of gas.

17
  • (at constant T, P)
  • If you triple the number of moles of gas (at
    constant temperature and pressure), the volume
    will also triple.

18
  • Example A 5.20 L sample at 18.00C and 2.00 atm
    pressure contains 0.436 moles of a gas. If we
    add an additional 1.27 moles of the gas at the
    same temperature and pressure, what will the
    total volume occupied by the gas be?

19
The Ideal Gas Law
  • P in atm
  • V in L
  • n in moles
  • T in Kelvins
  • R

20
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21
Keep in Mind
  • This relationship assumes that the gas behaves
    ideally (conditions of low pressure and high
    temperature). Correction factors must be added
    under certain conditions.
  • Keep track of dimensions! Many ideal gas law
    problems are best solved using DA.
  • Always list what you are given. You may be able
    to simplify the problem.

22
  • Example A sample containing 0.614 moles of a gas
    at 12.00C occupies a volume of 12.9 L. What
    pressure does the gas exert?

23
  • Example A sample of methane gas (CH4) at 0.848
    atm and 4.0oC occupies a volume of 7.0 L. What
    volume will the gas occupy if the pressure is
    increased to 1.52 atm and the temperature is
    increased to 11.0oC?

24
  • Example How many moles of a gas at 104oC would
    occupy a volume of 6.8 L at a pressure of 270
    mmHg?

25
Gas Stoichiometry
  • Many gas law problems involve calculating the
    volume of a gas produced by the reaction of
    volume of other gases. The problem solving
    strategy that we have used throughout is still
    the same. That is, you want to relate moles of
    reactants to moles of products. The ideal gas law
    will allow you to use the following strategy

26
Standard Temperature and PressureSTP
  • P
  • T
  • The molar volume of an ideal gas is _________ at
    STP

27
  • volume of reactants ?(apply the ideal gas law) ?
    moles of reactants? (apply stoichiometry)? moles
    of products (apply ideal gas law)? volume of
    products

28
  • Example A sample containing 15.0 g of dry ice
    (CO2(s)) is put into a balloon and allowed to
    sublime according to the following equation
  • CO2 (s) ? CO2 (g)
  • How big will the balloon be (ie, what is the
    volume of the balloon), at 22.0oC and 1.04 atm,
    after all of the dry ice has sublimed?

29
  • Example 0.500 L of H2 (g) are reacted with 0.600
    L of O2 (g) at STP according to the equation
  • 2H2 (g) O2 (g) ? 2H2O (g)
  • What volume will the H2O occupy at 1.00 atm and
    350.oC?

30
Density and Molar Mass
  • PV nRT
  • P nRT/V

31
  • Example A gas at 34.0oC and 1.75 atm has a
    density of 3.40 g/L. Calculate the molar mass
    (MM) of the gas.

32
Daltons Law of Partial Pressures
  • For a mixture of gases in a container, the total
    pressure is the sum of the pressures that each
    gas would exert if it were alone.
  • Because RT/V will be the same for each of the
    different gases in the same container.

33
  • Example A volume of 2.0 L of He at 46oC, and 1.2
    atm pressure, was added to a vessel that
    contained 4.5 L of N2 at STP. What is the total
    pressure and partial pressure of each gas at STP
    after the He is added?

34
The Production of Oxygen by Thermal Decomposition
of KCIO3
35
Mole Fraction
  • The ratio of the number of moles of a given
    component in a mixture to the total number of
    moles in the mixture.
  • The mole fraction of a particular component is a
    mixture of ideal gases is directly related to its
    partial pressure

36
Kinetic Molecular Theory of Gases
  • 1. The volume of the individual particles of a
    gas can be assumed to be negligible.
  • 2. The particles are in constant motion. The
    collisions of the particles with the walls of the
    container are the cause of the pressure exerted
    by the gas.
  • 3. The particles are assumed to exert no forces
    on each other
  • 4. The average kinetic energy of a collection of
    gas particles is assumed to be directly
    proportional to the Kelvin temperature of the gas.

37
Temperature is a Measure of the Average Kinetic
Energy of a Gas
38
Root Mean Square Velocity
  • The expression dealing with the average velocity
    of gas particles is called the root mean square
    velocity.
  • Where R 8.3145 J/K mol 8.3145 kg m2/s2 / Kmol
  • T temp in Kelvins
  • M mass of a mole of the gas in Kilograms

39
  • Example Calculate the root mean square velocity
    for the atoms in a sample of oxygen gas at
  • 0.0oC
  • 300.oC

40
Effusion or Diffusion?
  • Diffusion- term used to describe the mixing of
    gases.
  • Effusion- relates to the passage of a gas through
    an orifice into an evacuated chamber.

41
Grahams Law of Effusion
  • The higher the molar mass of the gas, the slower
    the rate of effusion through a small orifice.

42
  • Example How many times faster than He would NO2
    gas effuse?

43
With Regard to Diffusion
  • The important idea is that even though gases
    travel very rapidly (hundreds of meters per
    second), their motions are in all directions, so
    mixing is relatively slow. The basic structure
    of Grahams Law holds.

44
Chemistry in the Atmosphere
  • The atmosphere is composed of 78 N2, 21 O2,
    0.9 Ar, and 0.03 CO2 along with trace gases.
  • The composition of the atmosphere varies as a
    function of distance from the earths surface.
    Heavier molecules tend to be near the surface due
    to gravity.
  • Upper atmospheric chemistry is largely affected
    by UV, X-rays, and cosmic radiation emanating
    from space. The ozone layer is especially
    reactive to UV radiation.
  • Manufacturing and other processes of our modern
    society affect the chemistry of our atmosphere.
    Air pollution is a direct result of such
    processes.

45
Air Pollution
  • Photochemical smog reactions
  • N2 (g) O2 (g) heat ? 2NO (g)
  • 2NO (g) O2 (g) ? 2NO2 (g)
  • NO2 (g) radiant energy ? NO (g) O (g)
  • O (g) O2 (g) ? O3 (g) Ozone
  • Ozone causes lung and eye irritation and can be
    dangerous for people with asthma, emphysema, and
    other respiratory conditions.

46
Photochemical Smog
47
Ozone Layer
48
A Schematic Diagram of the Process for Scrubbing
Sulfur Dioxide from Stack Gases in Power Plants
49
Acid Rain
  • 2NO2 (g) H2O (l) ? HNO2 (aq) HNO3 (aq)
  • 2SO2 (g) O2(g) ? 2SO3 (g)
  • SO3 (g) H2O (l) ? H2SO4 (aq)

50
Acid Rain
51
Acid Rain
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