Title: Gases
1Chapter 5
2What are some things you remember about gases and
their behavior?
List, Pass, Amass
3Elemental States at 25oC
4Stuff You Already Know
State Property Solid
Liquid Gas Density S
hape Compressibility Thermal expansion
High High Low
Fixed Takes shape Expands
of lower part to fill the of
container container
Small Small Large
Very Small Moderate Small
5More You Remember
- In this state, the particles have sufficient
energy to overcome all forces that attract them
to each other. - Each particle is completely
separated from the others. - This results in low densities and the fact that
gases completely fill the container that holds
them.
6Gas Pressure
- Gases exhibit pressure on the containers that
hold them. - Pressure Force / Area
- Units N/m2 a.k.a. Pascal
-
Standard Pressures
760 mmHg 1 atm 760 torr 1.01x105 Pa
7Manometer measures air pressure of a gas in a
contained system.
vacuum
Barometer measures ambient air pressure.
One atm
760 mmHg 29.9 inHg
8Boyles Law
- P1V1 P2V2
- Pressure and volume are inversely proportional.
- Examine the graph of the data
Derivative!
Data!
9Charles Law
- V1/T1 V2/T2
- Volume and Temperature are directly proportional.
- Check out data
All gases intersect the x axis at a temperature
of 0 Kelvin(-273 oC). At temperatures lower
than 0 Kelvin, gases would have a negative volume
(impossible, as is negative Kelvin degrees)
10Avogadros Law
Guy-Lussacs Law
P1/T1 P2/T2 Also, at constant pressure
and temperature, the volumes of gases involved
in a chemical reaction are related by small
whole numbers. (ie 2 volumes of hydrogen and
1 volume of oxygen combine to form 2 volumes
of waterwe can use volume and moles similarly
when it comes to gas stoichiometry.)
11Ideal Gas Law
- PV nRT
- R 0.0821 Latm/Kmol
- When you hold variables constant, this equation
can be manipulated into one of the others that
we just talked about. - Since ideal gases dont exist, this equation
expresses the behavior a real gas approaches as
pressure is lowered and temperature is increased.
12Gas Stoichiometry
- At STP, the molar volume of a gas is 22.4 L /
mole
S.T.P. Temperature 273.15 K
(0 oC) Pressure 1 atm
Gas stoichiometry problems can involve a gas law
and/or the molar volume of a gas.
13Demo and Thoughts
Answer Now
Rearrange the ideal gas law to get an equation to
solve for the molar mass of a gas.
CRUSH THE CAN
- What is inside the can?
- Why does this happen?
- Which gas law(s) does it
- illustrate?
14Section 5.5 Daltons Law of Partial Pressure
- For a mixture of gases in a container, the total
pressure exerted is the sum of the pressures that
each gas would exert independently. - Ptotal P1 P2 P3, etc
Air is a mixture of gases Pair PN2 PO2
PAr PCO2 PH2O
15- The law of partial pressures also works for
moles. -
- Ptotal (n1 n2 )(RT/V)
- In a mixture of ideal gases, it is the TOTAL
NUMBER OF MOLES OF PARTICLES, not the identity of
the substance, that determines the pressure.
16Partial Pressure Try Me
- Mixtures of helium and oxygen are used in scuba
diving tanks to help prevent the bends. - For a particular dive, 46 liters of O2 and 12
liters of He were pumped in to a 5 liter tank.
Both gases were added at 1.0 atm pressure at
25oC. - Determine the partial pressure for both gases in
the scuba tank at 25oC. Then, determine the
total pressure in the tank.
17(No Transcript)
18- P total P He P O2
- P total 9.3 2.4
- P total 11.7 atm
19Mole Fractions
- Another way to determine the partial pressures of
a gas. - X n1 P1
- ntotal Ptotal
Chi, mole fraction
20When Gas Is Collected Over Water
- You must include the partial pressure of water in
your calculations. - The vapor pressure of water is a constant value
at each temperature. (you would need to look this
up on a table or it would be given to you.)
At 22oC, PH2O is 21 torr
21Section 5.6 Effusion and Diffusion
- Effusion occurs when a gas passes through a small
opening in a barrier. - Diffusion occurs when two gases mix randomly and
spontaneously.
22More on Diffusion, Effusion, and speed of
molecules
- The speed of diffusion is much less than the
theoretical velocity of the gas because of
COLLISIONS. - The average speed of a gas that is effusing is
proportional to the averages speed squared.
R 8.314 J/Kmol
23Even more on velocity of molecules that are
effusing and/or diffusing
- Grahams Law The rates of the gases is
proportional to the square root of the inverse of
the molar masses of the gases.
24Kinetic Molecular Theory
- Kinetic Molecular Theory is an attempt to
describe the behavior of an ideal gas - The particles are so tiny and spread out that
their volume is negligible. - Particles in constant motion collisions w/ walls
cause pressure. - Particles exert no intermolecular force.
- Average KE is directly proportional to Kelvin
temperature.
25Can we explain each gas law using KMT?
- Boyles Law
- Gay-Lussac
- Charles
- Avogadro
26KMT tutorial
- http//www.wwnorton.com/college/chemistry/chemistr
y3/ch/06/chemtours.aspx - Click on Chapter 6, Molecular Speed
27Maxwell-Boltzman Distribution Curves
- Seen in wwnorton tutorial.
- Illustrates the number of particles at a given
velocity and temperature.
28Gases are not Perfect
- Particles DO have mass and volume
- Small attractive forces between particles ARE
sometimes significant - Higher concentration of gas, more forces
- Under extreme pressures or at low temperature,
gases will condense to liq./sol.
29Ideal vs Real behavior
Nitrogen at Various temp.
Various Gas Deviations
30Well, Now What?
- The ideal gas law has to be adjusted to reflect
REAL gas behavior.
But who would want to do that?!!
I DO!!!
Johannes van der Waals Yes, hes the
intermolecular force guy, and its no coincidence!
31What Johannes Did
1
Ideal gas law
2
Adjusted for volume of gas
3
Adjusted for intermolecular forces
4
Glued Together
The Official Equation
5
32When should you use vanderWaals equation?
- Whenever you want to know the REAL behavior of
the gas, not just the ideal, limiting value. - Whenever you are working at low temperatures or
high pressures - Whenever you need to employ KMT to explain the
behavior of a gas AND BE CORRECT ALL THE
TIME.
33But how do you know the values of a and b?
- They are constants. You can look them up!
34Show Me Problem
- Calculate the pressure exerted by 0.500 mol of
nitrogen in a 1.00L container at 25.0oC using - The Ideal Gas Law
- The van der Waals Equation
35Try Me Problem
- Calculate the pressure exerted by 0.250 mol of
argon in a 1.00L container at 23.0oC using - The Ideal Gas Law
- The van der Waals Equation
36Atmospheric Chemistry
- Air is a homogeneous mixture!
- The heavier gases exist in the lower atmosphere,
while lighter gases are present in the upper
atmosphere. - Radon gas found in basements because it is very
heavy. - Oxygen is less prevalent at the tops of
mountains. - Hydrogen is more prevalent as you gain altitude.
- Troposphere (closest to us) is most greatly
impacted by our every-day routines.
Xe
H2
Kr
He
N2
Ar
H2O
O2
Ne
CO2
CH4
NO
37Causes of Air Pollution and Acid Rain
- Causes
- -Generation of electricity
- Coal burning plants
- -Transportation
- Combustion of petroleum
38Acid Rain Effects on Buildings
- Erosion of the stone
- Blackened streaks on bricks
39Why?
- Limestone (calcium carbonate) reacts with acid
rain (sulfuric acid) - CaCO3 H2SO4 ? CaSO4 H2CO3
- H2CO3 ? CO2 gas H2O
What's it all mean?
Calcium sulfate is soluble in water, which means
that the limestone will wash away as the rain
pours over it.
40Chemistry of Acid Rain as caused by burning coal
41Prevention of Acid Rain
- At coal plants
- Injection of limestone and air into
combustion chamber before products are allowed
to escape. - (product becomes CaSO4, which is unusable, but
non-toxic)
42Air Pollution Effects on People
- Burning eyes
- Trouble breathing
- Headaches
- Fatigue
- Photochemical smog
43Chemistry of Air Pollution as caused by excessive
traffic