1 / 0

Gas Laws

Gas Laws. James Caudle Wendy Cook John Putnam. Now that you have seen and done “Crush the Can”. Here it is on a little bigger scale. And an even bigger scale. Think back to the p hET computer models we did earlier, which law does “Crush the Can” follow?. Charles’ Law.

dakota
Télécharger la présentation

Gas Laws

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. Gas Laws

    James Caudle Wendy Cook John Putnam
  2. Now that you have seen and done “Crush the Can” Here it is on a little bigger scale
  3. And an even bigger scale Think back to the phET computer models we did earlier, which law does “Crush the Can” follow?
  4. Charles’ Law Connects how Temperature relates to Volume of gases. (Pressure is held constant) This is a direct proportion (one goes up the other goes up)
  5. Boyle’s law Connects how Pressure relates to Volume of gases. (Temperature is held constant) This is an inverse proportion (one goes up the other goes down)
  6. Amontons’ Law Connects how Pressure relates to Temperature (Kelvin scale) of gases. (Volume is held constant) This is a direct proportion (one goes up the other goes up)
  7. Activity Take a piece of paper and fold in in half length wise. With it folded still, do it again. Now evenly space out P, T, and V in that order (very important that it is in alphabetical order)
  8. How the PTV ruler works Pinch your finger over the P (Pivot point) Now raise the other end. This tells you that as T increases so does V Pinch your finger on T (Pivot point) Now raise the P on the end. This tells you that as P increases then V decreases and vice versa Pinch your finger on V (Pivot point) Now raise the other end. This tells you that as P increases so does T
  9. Example 1 A balloon filled with helium gas has a volume of 500 mL at a pressure of 1 atm. The balloon is released and reaches and altitude of 6.5 km, where the pressure is 0.5 atm. If the temperature has remained the same, what does the gas occupy at this height? #1 Which law would you use? #2 How do you know? #3 Anything need to be converted? #4 Solve (don’t forget sig figs & labels)
  10. Example 1 Answer #1 Boyle’s Law # 2 Specifically says “Temp has remained the same” (or your PTV ruler) #3 No
  11. Example 1 Answers (cont) #4
  12. Example 2 A sample of helium gas has a pressure of 1.20 atm at 22 °C. At what Celsius temperature will the helium reach a pressure of 2.00 atm, assuming constant volume? #1 Which law would you use? #2 How do you know? #3 Anything need to be converted? #4 Solve (don’t forget sig figs & labels)
  13. Example 2 Answer #1 Amontons #2 Says “assuming constant volume” (or your PTV ruler) #3 Yes, Temp needs to be in Kelvin. (add 273.15)
  14. Example 2 answer (cont.) #4
  15. Example 3 A sample of oxygen that occupies 1.00 x 106 mL at 575 mmHg is subjected to a pressure of 1.25 atm. What will the final volume be if the temperature is held constant? #1 Which law would you use? #2 How do you know? #3 Anything need to be converted? #4 Solve (don’t forget sig figs & labels)
  16. Example 3 answers #1 Boyle’s Law # 2 Specifically says “Temp has remained the same” (or your PTV ruler) #3 Yes, mmHg needs turned into atm or vice versa—Don’t forget dimensional analysis
  17. Example 3 answers (cont) #4
  18. Example 4 A sample of nitrogen gas is contained in a piston with a freely moving cylinder. At 0.0°C, the volume of the gas is 375 mL. To what temperature must the gas be heated to occupy a volume of 500.0 mL? #1 Which law would you use? #2 How do you know? #3 Anything need to be converted? #4 Solve (don’t forget sig figs & labels)
  19. Example 4 answers #1 Charles’ Law #2 Pressure is not mentioned (or PTV ruler) #3 Yes, Temp needs to be in Kelvin. (add 273.15)
  20. Example 4 answers (cont) #4
  21. Combined Gas Law If you noticed each of the three laws use only two of three variables. Because of this we can combine all three laws into one. We can do any of the four examples we just did using this by simply removing the variable that remains constant.
  22. However Nature does not keep one variable constant most of the time. As one property changes it can change not just one other property but both. Especially if the container is an elastic container that can change its shape.
  23. Combined Gas Law Example A 700.0 mL gas sample at STP is compressed to a volume of 200.0 mL, and the temperature is increased 30.0 ºC. What is the new pressure of the gas in Pa? #1 What is STP? #2 Anything need to be coverted? #3 Solve (don’t forget sig figs & labels)
  24. Combined Gas Law ExampleAnswers #1 Standard temp is 273.15 K and standard pressure is 101325 Pa #2 Yes, Temp needs to be in Kelvin. (add 273.15)
  25. Combined Gas Law ExampleAnswers (cont) #3
More Related