Title: Chapter 14 Gas Laws
1Chapter 14Gas Laws
2 Standards
Students know how to apply the gas laws to
relations between the pressure, temperature, and
volume of any amount of an ideal gas or any
mixture of ideal gases.
3Daltons Law of Partial Pressures
- For a mixture of gases in a container,
- PTotal P1 P2 P3 . . .
This is particularly useful in calculating the
pressure of gases collected over water.
4Daltons Law of Partial Pressure
- The total pressure in a container is the sum of
the pressure each gas would exert if it were
alone in the container. - The total pressure is the sum of the partial
pressures. - PTotal P1 P2 P3 P4 P5 ...
- For each P nRT/V
5Daltons Law Continued
- In the same container R, T and V are the same.
- PTotal n1RT n2RT n3RT ... V
V V
6The Mole Fraction
- Ratio of moles of the substance to the total
moles. - symbol is Greek letter chi c
- c1 n1 P1 nTotal PTotal
7Examples
- The partial pressure of nitrogen in air is 592
torr. Air pressure is 752 torr, what is the mole
fraction of nitrogen? - What is the partial pressure of nitrogen if the
container holding the air is compressed to 5.25
atm?
8Gas Density and Molar Mass
- D m/V
- Let M stand for molar mass
- M m/n
- n PV/RT
- M m
- PV/RT
- M mRT m RT DRT PV V
P P
- PTotal (n1 n2 n3...)RT V
- PTotal (nTotal)RT V
9Examples
- What is the density of ammonia at 23ºC and 735
torr? - A compound has the empirical formula CHCl. A 256
mL flask at 100.ºC and 750 torr contains .80 g of
the gaseous compound. What is the molecular
formula?
10Boyles Law
Pressure is inversely proportional to volume when
temperature is held constant.
11Examples
- 1. 20.5 L of nitrogen at 25ºC and 742 torr are
compressed to 9.8 atm at constant T. What is the
new volume?2. 30.6 mL of carbon dioxide at 740
torr is expanded at constant temperature to 750
mL. What is the final pressure in kPa?
12A Graph of Boyles Law
13Charless Law
- The volume of a gas is directly proportional to
temperature, and extrapolates to zero at zero
Kelvin. - (P constant)
Temperature MUST be in KELVINS!
14Examples
- 1.What would the final volume be if 247 mL of gas
at 22ºC is heated to 98ºC , if the pressure is
held constant? - 2. At what temperature would 40.5 L of gas at
23.4ºC have a volume of 81.0 L at constant
pressure?
15A Graph of Charles Law
16Gay Lussacs Law
The pressure and temperature of a gas
are directly related, provided that the volume
remains constant.
Temperature MUST be in KELVINS!
17Examples
- A sample of nitrogen gas has a pressure of
- 6.58 kPa at 539 K. If the volume does not
change, what will the pressure be at 211 K ? - The pressure in a car tire is 198 kPa at
- 27C. After a long drive, the pressure is
225 kPa. What is the temperature of the air in
the tire? Assume that the volume is constant.
18A Graph of Gay-Lussacs Law
19The Combined Gas Law
The combined gas law expresses the relationship
between pressure, volume and temperature of a
fixed amount of gas.
20Examples
- A deodorant can has a volume of 175 mL and a
pressure of 3.8 atm at 22ºC. What volume of gas
could the can release at 22ºC and 743 torr?
21Ideal Gases
Ideal gases are imaginary gases that perfectly
fit all of the assumptions of the kinetic
molecular theory.
- Gases consist of tiny particles that are far
apart relative to their size. - Collisions between gas particles and between
particles and the walls of the container are
elastic collisions - No kinetic energy is lost in elastic collisions
22Ideal Gases (continued)
- Gas particles are in constant, rapid motion.
They therefore possess kinetic energy, the energy
of motion - There are no forces of attraction between gas
particles - The average kinetic energy of gas particles
depends on temperature, not on the identity of
the particle.
23Real Gases Do Not Behave Ideally
Real gases DO experience inter-molecular
attractions
Real gases DO have volume
Real gases DO NOT have elastic collisions
24Deviations from Ideal Behavior
Likely to behave nearly ideally
Gases at high temperature and low pressure
Small non-polar gas molecules
Likely not to behave ideally
Gases at low temperature and high pressure
Large, polar gas molecules
25IDEAL GAS LAW
- PV nRT
- P pressure in atm, kPa, mm Hg
- ? n number of moles
- ? V volume in Liters
- ? R is the ideal gas constant depends on the
pressure unit - ? R 0.0821 L?atm/ K?mol or
- R 8.314 L?kPa/ K?mol or
- R 62.36 L?mmHg/ K?mol
26Examples
- 1.A 47.3 L container containing 1.62 mol of He
is heated until the pressure reaches 1.85 atm.
What is the temperature? - 2.Kr gas in a 18.5 L cylinder exerts a pressure
of 8.61 atm at 24.8ºC What is the mass of Kr? - 3.A sample of gas has a volume of 4.18 L at 29ºC
and 732 torr. What would its volume be at 24.8ºC
and 756 torr?
27Diffusion
- Diffusion describes the mixing of gases. The
rate of diffusion is the rate of gas mixing. - Diffusion is the result of random movement of
gas molecules - The rate of diffusion increases with temperature
- Small molecules diffuse faster than large
molecules
28Grahams Law of Diffusion
M1 Molar Mass of gas 1
M2 Molar Mass of gas 2
29Examples
- Which gas effuses faster hydrogen or
chlorine, and by what factor? - 2. Calculate the ratio of the velocity of helium
atoms to fluorine molecules at the same
temperature.