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Chapter 11: Gases
32

Chapter 11: Gases. Section 1: Gases and Pressure.

Dec 13, 2015

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Page 1: Chapter 11: Gases. Section 1: Gases and Pressure.

Chapter 11:Gases

Page 2: Chapter 11: Gases. Section 1: Gases and Pressure.

Section 1: Gases and Pressure

Page 3: Chapter 11: Gases. Section 1: Gases and Pressure.

Units of Pressure

• Millimeters of Mercury (mm Hg) is the most common because mercury barometers are most often used. Average atmospheric pressure at sea level at 0°C is 760 mm Hg.

• Torr is another name for pressure when a mercury barometer is used in honor of Torricelli for his invention of the barometer. 1 torr = 1 mm Hg

Page 4: Chapter 11: Gases. Section 1: Gases and Pressure.

• One atmosphere of pressure (1 atm) is defined as being exactly equivalent to 760 mm Hg.

• One pascal (Pa) is defined as the pressure exerted by the force of one Newton (1 N) acting on an area of one square meter. Can also be expressed in kilopascals (kPa).

1 atm = 1.01325 x 105 Pa = 101.325 kPa

1 atm = 760 mm Hg = 760 torr

Page 5: Chapter 11: Gases. Section 1: Gases and Pressure.

Standard Temperature and Pressure

• Because volumes of gases change so much when the temperature or pressure changes, scientists have agreed on standard conditions of exactly 1 atm pressure and 0˚C.

• These are called standard temperature and pressure or STP.

Page 6: Chapter 11: Gases. Section 1: Gases and Pressure.

• 0.971 atm x 760 mm Hg =

1 1 atm

• 0.971 atm x 101.325 kPa =

1 1 atm

738 mm Hg

98.4 kPa

Page 7: Chapter 11: Gases. Section 1: Gases and Pressure.

Dalton’s Law of Partial Pressures

• Partial Pressure is the pressure of each gas in a mixture of a gas.

• Dalton’s Law of Partial Pressure states that the total pressure of a gas mixture is the sum of the partial pressures of the component gases.

PT = P1 + P2 + P3 + …

Page 8: Chapter 11: Gases. Section 1: Gases and Pressure.

• PT is the total pressure of the mixture.

• P1, P2, P3, and so on, are the partial pressures of the component gases.

Examples:

• PT = 2.00 atm + 3.00 atm + 4.00 atm

• PT = 9.00 atm

• 4.00 atm = 2.30 atm + PAr

• Par = 4.00-2.30 = 1.70 atm

Page 9: Chapter 11: Gases. Section 1: Gases and Pressure.

Gases Collected by Water Displacement

• The pressure of the water vapor must be taken into account when determining the pressure of the gas.

Patm = Pgas + PH20

• The vapor pressure of water is dependent on temperature (Table A-8 on page 859).

Page 10: Chapter 11: Gases. Section 1: Gases and Pressure.

Example:• Oxygen gas from the decomposition of

potassium chlorate, KClO3, was collected by water displacement. The barometric pressure and the temperature during the experiment were 731.0 torr and 20.0°C. What was the partial pressure of the oxygen collected?

• Patm = 731.0 torr and PH2O = 17.5 torr at 20.0°C

• Patm = PO2 + PH2O PO2 = Patm – PH2O

• PO2 = 731.0 torr – 17.5 torr = 713.5 torr

Page 11: Chapter 11: Gases. Section 1: Gases and Pressure.

Example:• Some Hydrogen gas is collected over water

at 20.0°C. The partial pressure of hydrogen is 742.5 torr. What was the barometric pressure at the time the gas was collected?

• PH2 = 742.5 torr and PH2O = 17.5 torr at 20.0°C

• Patm = PH2 + PH2O

• Patm = 742.5 torr + 17.5 torr = 760.0 torr

Page 12: Chapter 11: Gases. Section 1: Gases and Pressure.

Section 2:The Gas Laws

Page 13: Chapter 11: Gases. Section 1: Gases and Pressure.

Boyle’s Law: Pressure-Volume Relationship

P1 x V1 = P2 x V2

•What must stay constant for Boyle’s Law to work? Temperature

•Pressure can be in any unit, but both must be the same.

•Volume can be in any unit, but both must be the same.

Page 14: Chapter 11: Gases. Section 1: Gases and Pressure.

Example:• A sample of oxygen gas has a volume of 150.0

mL when its pressure is 0.947 atm. What will the volume of the gas be at a pressure of 0.987 atm if the temperature remains constant?

• Trying to find the new volume V2

• So we rearrange the equation

V2 = P1 x V1 / P2

• Plug in the 3 known values and solve.

V2 = 144 mL

Page 15: Chapter 11: Gases. Section 1: Gases and Pressure.

Example:• A balloon filled with helium gas has a volume of

500 mL at a pressure of 1 atm. If the pressure decreases to 0.5 atm and the temperature remained the same, what volume does the gas now occupy?

• Trying to find the new volume V2

• So we rearrange the equation

V2 = P1 x V1 / P2

• Plug in the 3 known values and solve.

V2 = 1000 mL

Page 16: Chapter 11: Gases. Section 1: Gases and Pressure.

Charles’s Law: Volume-Temperature Relationship

V1 = V2

T1 = T2

•What must stay constant for Charles’s Law to work? pressure

•Volume can be in any unit, but both must be the same.

•Temperature must in Kelvins. K = 273 + °C

Page 17: Chapter 11: Gases. Section 1: Gases and Pressure.

Example:• A sample of Neon gas occupies a volume of

752 mL at 25°C. What volume will the gas occupy at 50°C if the pressure remains constant?

• Trying to find the new volume V2

Convert °C to Kelvins

• Rearrange the equation V2 = V1 x T2 / T1

• Plug in the 3 known values and solve.

V2 = 815 mL Ne

Page 18: Chapter 11: Gases. Section 1: Gases and Pressure.

Example:• A sample of Nitrogen gas in a container has

a volume of 375 mL at 0.0°C. To what temperature must the gas be heated to occupy a volume of 500.0 mL?

• Trying to find the new temperature T2

Convert °C to Kelvins

• Rearrange the equation T2 = V2 x T1 / V1

• Plug in the 3 known values and solve.

T2 = 364 K or 91°C

Page 19: Chapter 11: Gases. Section 1: Gases and Pressure.

Gay-Lussac’s Law: Pressure-Temperature Relationship

P1 = P2

T1 = T2

•What must stay constant for Gay-Lussac’s Law to work? volume

•Pressure can be in any unit, but both must be the same.

•Temperature must in Kelvins. K = 273 + °C

Page 20: Chapter 11: Gases. Section 1: Gases and Pressure.

Example:• The gas in a container is at a pressure of 3.00

atm at 25°C. Directions on the container warn the user not to keep it in a place where the temperature exceeds 52°C. What would the gas pressure in the container be at 52°C?

• Trying to find new pressure P2.Convert °C to Kelvins

• Rearrange equation P2 = P1 x T2 / T1

• Plug in the three known values and solve.

P2 = 3.27 atm

Page 21: Chapter 11: Gases. Section 1: Gases and Pressure.

Example:• 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?

• Trying to find new temperature T2.Convert °C to Kelvins

• Rearrange equation T2 = P2 x T1 / P1

• Plug in the three known values and solve.

T2 = 219°C

Page 22: Chapter 11: Gases. Section 1: Gases and Pressure.

The Combined Gas Law

P1 V1 = P2 V2

T1 T2

•This law works when nothing is staying constant. •Pressure can be in any unit, but both must be the same. •Volume can be in any unit, but both must be the same.•Temperature must in Kelvins. K = 273 + °C

Page 23: Chapter 11: Gases. Section 1: Gases and Pressure.

Example:• A helium-filled balloon has a volume of 50.0

L at 25°C and 1.08 atm. What volume will it have at 0.855 atm and 10°C?

• Trying to find the new volume V2

• Rearrange equation

V2 = P1 x V1 x T2 / T1 x P2

• Convert °C to Kelvins

• Plug in the known values and solve.

V2 = 60.0 L

Page 24: Chapter 11: Gases. Section 1: Gases and Pressure.

Example:• The volume of a gas is 27.5 mL at 22.0°C and

0.974 atm. If the volume decreased to 26.3 ml at 0.993 atm, what is the new temperature of the gas?

• Trying to find the new temperature T2

• Rearrange equation

T2 = P2 x V2 x T1 / P1 x V1

• Convert °C to Kelvins• Plug in the known values and solve.

T2 = 288 K or 14.6°C

Page 25: Chapter 11: Gases. Section 1: Gases and Pressure.

Section 3:Gas Volumes and Ideal Gas Law

Page 26: Chapter 11: Gases. Section 1: Gases and Pressure.

• Standard Molar Volume of A Gas: the volume occupied by one mole of a gas at STP is 22.4 L.

22.4 L or 1 mol

1 mol 22.4 L

• Using this conversion, you can get from grams moles Liters or vice versa.

• Remember: this only works at STP

Page 27: Chapter 11: Gases. Section 1: Gases and Pressure.

Examples

• What volume does 0.8980 mol of gas occupy at STP?

• What quantity of gas, in moles, is contained in 2.21 L at STP?

Page 28: Chapter 11: Gases. Section 1: Gases and Pressure.

Ideal Gas Law• The Ideal Gas Law is the mathematical

relationship among pressure, volume, temperature, and the number of moles of gas.

PV = nRTP = PressureV = Volume

n = number of molesR = ideal gas constant

T = Temperature

Page 29: Chapter 11: Gases. Section 1: Gases and Pressure.

Ideal Gas Constant

• The value you will use is

R = 0.0821 L·atm/(mol·K)

• It may be necessary to convert units.

Example

• What is the pressure in atmospheres exerted by a 0.750 mol sample of nitrogen gas in a 10.0 L container at 298 K?

Page 30: Chapter 11: Gases. Section 1: Gases and Pressure.

Section 4: Diffusion and Effusion

Page 31: Chapter 11: Gases. Section 1: Gases and Pressure.

Graham’s Law of Effusion• Diffusion: the gradual mixing of two or more

gases due to their spontaneous, random motion.

• Effusion: the process whereby the molecules of a gas confined in a container randomly pass through a tiny opening in the container.

Page 32: Chapter 11: Gases. Section 1: Gases and Pressure.

Examples

• Compare the rates of effusion of hydrogen and oxygen at the same temperature and pressure.

• Compare the rates of effusion of helium and argon at the same temperature and pressure.