1 / 50

Chapter 5 Gases

Chapter 5 Gases. Chapter 5 Gases. WHY?. Sketch of Modern Balloons. WHY?. Mathematics. V/T = constant. 1.00. PSI. 8.00. PSI. 8.00. PSI. WHY?. Mathematics. PV = constant. Mathematics. V/n = constant (n = moles). Moles. 273. 1.00. K. ATM. 804. 9.79. K. ATM. (atm).

ondrea
Download Presentation

Chapter 5 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. Chapter 5 Gases

  2. Chapter 5 Gases

  3. WHY?

  4. Sketch of ModernBalloons

  5. WHY?

  6. Mathematics • V/T = constant

  7. 1.00 PSI

  8. 8.00 PSI

  9. 8.00 PSI WHY?

  10. Mathematics • PV = constant

  11. Mathematics • V/n = constant • (n = moles)

  12. Moles

  13. 273 1.00 K ATM

  14. 804 9.79 K ATM

  15. (atm)

  16. Mathematics • P/T= constant

  17. MathematicsSummary • V/n = constant • V/T = constant • P/T = constant • PV = constant

  18. MathematicsSummary • V/nT = constant • P/T = constant • PV/nT = constant

  19. MathematicsSummary • PV/nT = constant • PV = nTconstant • constant = R • PV = nRT Ideal Gas Law

  20. Conditions of Use • PV = nRT Ideal Gas Law • P units must be atm’s • V units must be liters • T must be in Kelvin

  21. Gas Law ResourcesPressures equivalent to the standard 1.00 ATM • 28.3 ft. H2O • 29.92 in. Hg • 76.0 cm Hg • 760.0 mm Hg • 760.0 torr • 14.7 psi. • 1.013 bar • 1.013 x 105 Pa • 101.3 kPa • (1 Pa = 1 Nt/M2)

  22. Practice • Fill out the following chart. • mm Hg. atm. kPa. bar • 1215 . • 0.714 . • 143 . • 0.904 .

  23. Gas Law ResourcesTemperature - must be absolute - never negative • Temperature must be in Kelvin • K = oC + 273

  24. Practice • Calculate the volume of 1.0 mole of a gas at Standard Temperature and Pressure.

  25. Practice • Fill out the following chart for C4H10 • Press. Vol. Temp. Moles Grams • 1.75 L 19 oC 1.66 . • 0.895 atm 6.0 oC 14.0 . • 433 mm Hg 92.4 mL 0.395 . • 1.74 bar 8.66 L 310 K .

  26. Experiment

  27. Experiment

  28. Experiment 4 Fe + 3 O2→ 2 Fe2O3 Fe + N2→ NR

  29. Interpretation • Air contains both N2 and O2 • Each gas has its own independent pressure. • “The sum of all individual gas pressures in a gas mixture is equal to the total pressure” DALTON • Dalton’s Law of Partial Pressures

  30. (go to video)

  31. KMT • Kinetic Molecular Theory of gases • Gases consist of very tiny particles in continuous random motion. • Particle collisions are elastic(no energy lost). • Particle volume is negligible. • Particle interaction is negligible. • molecular speed causes both pressure and volume of gases

  32. Graham’s Law • Often called Grahams’ Law of Diffusion - in error • Diffusion - movement of gas down an open tube • complex and influenced by many factors. • Effusion - movement of gas through small holes. • Graham’s Law of Effusion of Gases • “At a given temperature and pressure, gaseous effusion rate in moles per time unit, is inversely proportional to the square root of the molar mass of the gases”. • effusion rate of B = √mm B • effusion rate of A √mm A

  33. Ideal vs Real • Review KMT. Obvious non-realities. • Some gas molecules are NOT tiny. • Many gas collisions DO lose energy • Gas molecules HAVE a noticeable volume • Some molecules have SIGNIFICANT interaction.

More Related