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Ch 12 Gases

Ch 12 Gases. Properties of gases. Unique due to distance between particles Gases are fluids(can flow) due to separation, can pass each other. Low density due to lg distance of separation (most volume empty space)

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Ch 12 Gases

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  1. Ch 12 Gases

  2. Properties of gases • Unique due to distance between particles • Gases are fluids(can flow) due to separation, can pass each other. • Low density due to lg distance of separation (most volume empty space) • High compressibility due to lg separation. Apply pressure push gas molecules closer together and decrease volume. • Completely fill a container, gas in constant motion and expand to fill a container.

  3. Gas pressure • Collision of gas molecules with container, also causes air pressure. Force per unit area of surface. • P=F/A (units 1N/m2 = Pascal Pa) • Measuring pressure: • Atmospheric pressure measured by a barometer • Atm exert pressure on the surface of Hg in an evacuated column. • Pressure units (pg 420 table 1) • 1 atm = 101 kPa = 760 mm Hg = 760 torr • At sea level 760 mm Hg = 1 atm. STP 1 atm & 0oC • Convert 740. Mm Hg to atm, torr and kPa

  4. Kinetic-molecular theory • Behavior of a physical system depend on the combine actions of the molecules constituting the system. • For gases; • 1. Gas particles are in constant rapid motion • 2. Gas particles are very far apart relative to their size. • => explain fluidity and compressibility • Collisions perfectly elastic, total energy conserved (low attractive intermolecular forces) • Gas temperature proportional to ave. KE • Increase temp (add heat) increase motion, not all gas are moving at the same speed. (pg 422 figure 8)

  5. Gas laws • Measurable properties of gases • Pressure, temperature, volume and moles • Look at pairs of properties to determine relationship (direct or indirect). • P/V relationship, Robert Boyle/Boyle’s law • Fixed amount of gas at constant temperature the volume of a gas increases as the pressure decreases (indirect relationship) • P1V1 = P2V2: complete the following • A 2.5L of a gas at 110.0 kPa is expanded to 4.0L, what is the new pressure? • 650 mL of a gas is stored in acylinder with a moveable piston at 225 kPa. What would the volume of the gas at 545 kPa?

  6. Temperature/volume relationship • Jacques Charles/Charles law: • Gases volume is directly proportional the Kelvin temperature at conts. P&n. • V1/T1 = V2/T2: complete the following • A balloon with a volume of 15.5 L is inflated in a room at 20.0oC and then taken outside with temperature of 7.0oC, what is the new volume? • If the original temperature of a 62.2L sample of a gas is 150oC, what is the final temperature of the gas if the new volume is 24.4L

  7. Temperature/pressure relationship • Joseph Gay-lussac/Gay-Lussac’s law: • Pressure of a gas at a constant volume is directly proportional to the absolute (Kelvin) temperature • P1/T1=P2/T2: complete the following: • The pressure in a tire is 101 kPa at 10.0oC, what will the pressure of the tire at 45.0oC? • If a gas at 600oC exerts a pressure of 1515 kPa, at what temperature will the gas exert 151.5 kPa of pressure?

  8. Volume/mole relationship • Avogadro: equal volume of all gases under the same conditions have the same number of particles. • Avogadro’s law; equal volume of gases at the same temperature and pressure contains equal # of molecules. • Gas volume is directly proportional to # of moles of gas at the same T&P • V1/n1=V2/n2, at STP 1 mol gas = 22.4L

  9. Ideal gas law • Combination of Boyle’s, Charlie's, Gay-Lussac’s and Avogadro’s law. Assume gases behave ideally (no attractive forces and volume) • Ideal gas: imaginary gas whose particles are infinitely small and do not interact with each other. • By combining 4 laws • PV, V/T, P/T, & V/n = ideal gas law • PV=nRT, P (kPa, mm Hg or atm), V (L), n (mol) and T (k) • R=proportionality constant=8.314 L kPa/mol K • = 0.0821 L mmHg/mol K = 62.4 Latm/mol K

  10. Ideal/real gases • Real gases behave ideally at rm.temp and atm pressure. • Low vol (attractive forces ignore), as volume decreases increase particle attraction ==> deviation. • At high P volume of particles close to total volume => volume higher than calculated (pg 434 figure 16) • Complete the following: • How many moles of gas are in a balloon that has a volume of 15.9L at a pressure 149 kPa and 28oC? • What is the volume of 4.35 moles of a gas at a pressure of 85.6 kPa and 26.0oC?

  11. Gas behavior & chemical formulas • Diffusion: movement of particles from regions of higher density to regions of lower density. • Gases diffuse through each other at s very rapid rate. • High [ ] to low [ ] => homogeneous mixture • Low mass diffuse faster than higher mass => entropy increase

  12. Effusion • Passage of gas under pressure through a tiny opening. • Thomas Graham: • At constant T&P the rate of effusion of a gas is inversely proportional to the square root of the gas’s molar mass (M) => Graham law of diffusion • Va/Vb = Mb/Ma low MM travels faster than heavier particles. Calculate the following: • The average VO2 = 480m/s at rm T, how fast would HCN travel at rm T • The average VCO2 = 409m/s at rm T, what is the MM of a gas whose average Vx = 322 m/s?

  13. Gas Rx => chemical formulas • Gay-Lussac’s law of combining volume: • Volume of gases involved in chemical change can be represented by the ratio of small whole numbers (coeff. of balanced equation) • 1 vol H gas + 1 vol Cl gas => 2 vol HCl gas • H and Cl has to be diatomic H2 and Cl2 • Cannizzaro used this relationship to correctly write H2O for water (Dalton had OH formula for water)

  14. Dalton’s law of partial pressure • Mixture of gases, each gas exerts pressure as if alone => partial pressure of gas • Dalton’s law of partial pressure: • Total pressure of mixture of gases is equal to the sum of the partial pressure of the components gases • Pt = Pa + Pb + Pc +… • Gas Stoichiometry: • Ideal gas law relates moles with other gas variables (TP&V) • Gas volume corresponds to mole ratio. • Ratio of gas volume same as mole ratio in a balanced equations.

  15. Practice • In the combustion reaction of 149g of propane with excess oxygen, what volume of CO2 is produced at STP? • C3H8 + 5O2 --> 3CO2 + 4H2O • How much potassium chlorate (decomposed) will be necessary to produce 125mL of O2(g) at 700oC and a pressure of 98.6 kPa?

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