1 / 39

Lecture 3. The Kinetic Molecular Theory of Gases

Lecture 3. The Kinetic Molecular Theory of Gases. THE IDEAL GAS LAW:. A purely empirical law – solely the consequence of experimental observations Explains the behavior of gases over a limited range of conditions

Download Presentation

Lecture 3. The Kinetic Molecular Theory of Gases

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Lecture 3. The Kinetic Molecular Theory of Gases

  2. THE IDEAL GAS LAW: • A purely empirical law – solely the consequence of experimental observations • Explains the behavior of gases over a limited range of conditions • A macroscopic explanation. Say nothing about the microscopic behavior of the atoms or molecules that make up the gas.

  3. THE KINETIC MOLECULAR THEORY: • Starts with a set of assumptions about the microscopic behavior of matter at the atomic level. • Assumes that the constituent particles (atoms or molecules) obey the laws of classical physics • Accounts for the random behavior of the particles with statistics. • Offers an explanation of the macroscopic behavior of gases • Predicts experimental phenomena that haven’t been observed (Maxwell-Boltzmann Speed distribution)

  4. The Four Postulates of the Kinetic Theory • A gas consists of large number of identical molecules separated by distances that are so large compared to their size. • The gas molecules are constantly moving in random directions with a distribution of speeds. • The molecules exert no forces on one another between collisions, so they move in straight lines with constant velocities. • The collision of molecules with the walls of the container are elastic: no energy is lost during a collision. Collisions with the walls of the container are the source of pressure.

  5. The Ideal Gas in a Cube with sides, L

  6. Cartesian Coordinates for a Gas Particles

  7. Cartesian Components of a Particle’s velocity

  8. Components of velocity along the X axis

  9. Calculation of the Force Exerted on a Container by Collision of a Single Particle

  10. Calculation of the Pressure in Terms of Microscopic Properties of the Gas Particles

  11. The Pressure of a Gas: • is directly proportional to the kinetic energy. • or to the root mean square velocity of the molecule. • The larger the velocity , more frequent collisions, greater change in momentum

  12. The Kinetic Theory Relates the Kinetic Energy of the Particles to Temperature

  13. Kinetic Energy and Temperature: • Two ideal gases at the same temperature will have the same average kinetic energy.

  14. Mean Square Speed and Temperature By use of the facts that (a) PV and nRT have units of energy, and (b) the square of the component of velocity of a gas particle striking the wall is on average one third of the mean square speed, the following expression may be derived: where Kb is the Boltzman constant (1.38 x 10-23), T is the temperature in Kelvin, and M is the molar mass expressed in kg/mol (to make the speed come out in units of m/s). root mean square velocity

  15. Sample Problem Calculate the Kinetic Energy of (a) a Hydrogen Molecule traveling at 1.57 x 103 m/sec, at 300 K. Mass = KE =

  16. Sample Problem Calculate the kinetic Kinetic Energies for (b) CH4 and (c) CO2 at 200 K (b) For Methane, CH4 , v = 5.57 x 102 m/s KE = (c) For Carbon Dioxide, CO2 , v = 3.37 x 102 m/s KE =

  17. Kinetic Energy and Temperature Finally, we obtain the relationship of kinetic energy of one gas phase particle to temperature: Note that: (a) Temperature is a measure of the molecular motion, and (b) the kinetic energy is only a function of temperature. At the same temperature, all gases have the same average kinetic energy.

  18. Path of One Gas Particle

  19. Molecular Speed Distribution Thus far we have discussed the random nature of molecular motion in terms of the average (root mean square) speed. But how is this speed distributed? The kinetic theory predicts the distribution function for the molecular speeds. Below we show the distribution of molecular speeds for N2 gas at three temperatures.

  20. The Mathematical Description of the Maxwell-Boltzmann Speed Distribution

  21. Features of Speed Distribution • The most probable speed is at the peak of the curve. • The most probable speed increases as the temperature increases. • The distribution broadens as the temperature increases.

  22. Relationship between molar mass and molecular speed

  23. Features of Speed Distribution • The most probable speed increases as the molecular mass decreases • The distribution broadens as the molecular mass decreases.

  24. Calculation of Molecular Speeds and Kinetic Energies T = 300 K

  25. The Three Measures of the Speed of a Typical Particle

  26. Various Ways to Summarize the ‘Mean’ Speed.

  27. Sample Problem: Calculate the Kinetic Energy of (a) a Hydrogen Molecule traveling at 1.57 x 103 m/sec, at 300 K. Mass = KE =

  28. Sample Problem: Kinetic Energies for (b) CH4 and (c) CO2 at 200 K (b) For Methane, CH4 ,v =5.57 x 102 m/s KE = (c) For Carbon Dioxide, CO2 ,v =3.37 x 102 m/s KE =

  29. Note • At a given temperature, all gases have the same molecular kinetic energy distributions, and • the same average molecular kinetic energy.

  30. Effusion Effusion is the process whereby a gas escapes from its container through a tiny hole into an evacuated space. According to the kinetic theory a lighter gas effuses faster because the most probable speed of its molecules is higher. Therefore more molecules escape through the tiny hole in unit time. This is made quantitative in Graham's Law of effusion: The rate of effusion of a gas is inversely proportional to the square root of its molar mass.

  31. The Process of Effusion

  32. Effusion Calculation Problem 15-2: Calculate the ratio of the effusion rates of ammonia and hydrochloric acid. Approach: The effusion rate is inversely proportional to square root of molecular mass, so we find the molar ratio of each substance and take its square root. The inverse of the ratio of the square roots is the effusion rate ratio. Numerical Solution: HCl = NH3 = RateNH3 =

  33. Diffusion • The movement of one gas through another by thermal random motion. • Diffusion is a very slow process in air because the mean free path is very short (for N2 at STP it is 6.6x10-8 m). Given the nitrogen molecule’s high velocity, the collision frequency is very high also (7.7x109 collisions/s). • Diffusion also follows Graham's law:

  34. Diffusion of a gas particle through a space filled with other particles

  35. NH3(g) + HCl(g) = NH4Cl(s) HCl = 36.46 g/mol NH3 = 17.03 g/mol Problem 15-3: Relative Diffusion Rate of NH3 compared to HCl: RateNH3 =

  36. The inverse relation between diffusion rate and molar mass. Due to it’s light mass, ammonia travels 1.46 times as fast as hydrogen chloride NH3(g) + HCl(g) NH4Cl(s)

  37. Relative Diffusion Rates of NH3 and HCl

  38. Gaseous Diffusion Separation of Uranium 235 / 238 235UF6 vs 238UF6 Separation Factor = after Two runs after approximately 2000 runs 235UF6 is > 99% Purity ! Y - 12 Plant at Oak Ridge National Lab

More Related