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Deviations from the Ideal Gas Law and Chemistry in the Atmosphere Chemistry 142 B Autumn Quarter, 2004 J. B. Callis, Instructor Lecture #16
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Deviations from the Ideal Gas Law and Chemistry in the Atmosphere Chemistry 142 B Autumn Quarter, 2004 J. B. Callis, Instructor Lecture #16.

Dec 21, 2015

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Page 1: Deviations from the Ideal Gas Law and Chemistry in the Atmosphere Chemistry 142 B Autumn Quarter, 2004 J. B. Callis, Instructor Lecture #16.

Deviations from the Ideal Gas Lawand

Chemistry in the Atmosphere

Chemistry 142 B

Autumn Quarter, 2004

J. B. Callis, Instructor

Lecture #16

Page 2: Deviations from the Ideal Gas Law and Chemistry in the Atmosphere Chemistry 142 B Autumn Quarter, 2004 J. B. Callis, Instructor Lecture #16.
Page 3: Deviations from the Ideal Gas Law and Chemistry in the Atmosphere Chemistry 142 B Autumn Quarter, 2004 J. B. Callis, Instructor Lecture #16.

Deviations from Ideal behavior for real gases

Page 4: Deviations from the Ideal Gas Law and Chemistry in the Atmosphere Chemistry 142 B Autumn Quarter, 2004 J. B. Callis, Instructor Lecture #16.

The effect of intermolecular attractions on measured gas pressure.

Page 5: Deviations from the Ideal Gas Law and Chemistry in the Atmosphere Chemistry 142 B Autumn Quarter, 2004 J. B. Callis, Instructor Lecture #16.

The effect ofmolecularvolume onmeasured gasvolume.

Page 6: Deviations from the Ideal Gas Law and Chemistry in the Atmosphere Chemistry 142 B Autumn Quarter, 2004 J. B. Callis, Instructor Lecture #16.

The van der Waals equation of state is valid over a wider range of conditions than the ideal gas law:

nRTnbVV

anP

2

2

Where P is the measured pressure, V is the container volume, n is the number of moles of gas and T is the temperature. a and b are the van der Waals constants, specific for each gas.

Page 7: Deviations from the Ideal Gas Law and Chemistry in the Atmosphere Chemistry 142 B Autumn Quarter, 2004 J. B. Callis, Instructor Lecture #16.

Problem 16-1:van der Waals Calculation of a Real gas

Problem: A tank of 20.00 liters contains Chlorine gas at a temperature of 20.000C at a pressure of 2.000 atm. if the tank is pressurized to a new volume of 1.000 L and a temperature of 150.00 0C. What is the new pressure using the ideal gas equation, and the van der Waals equation?Plan: Do the calculations according to the ideal gas and vdV eqns.Solution:

n =

Pideal =

PvdV =

Page 8: Deviations from the Ideal Gas Law and Chemistry in the Atmosphere Chemistry 142 B Autumn Quarter, 2004 J. B. Callis, Instructor Lecture #16.

Variation of Temperature and Pressure with Altitude

Page 9: Deviations from the Ideal Gas Law and Chemistry in the Atmosphere Chemistry 142 B Autumn Quarter, 2004 J. B. Callis, Instructor Lecture #16.

Sources of Air Pollution

• Transportation

• Production of Electricity

Page 10: Deviations from the Ideal Gas Law and Chemistry in the Atmosphere Chemistry 142 B Autumn Quarter, 2004 J. B. Callis, Instructor Lecture #16.

Air Pollution from Cars and Trucks

Combustion of petroleum produces CO, CO2, NO and NO2 together with unburned petroleum.

N2 + O2 2 NO; 2 NO + O2 2 NO2

NO2 NO + O (reactive) : O + O2 O3 (ozone)

This net production of ozone then produces other pollutants.

Page 11: Deviations from the Ideal Gas Law and Chemistry in the Atmosphere Chemistry 142 B Autumn Quarter, 2004 J. B. Callis, Instructor Lecture #16.

Concentration of Smog Components Over a Day

Page 12: Deviations from the Ideal Gas Law and Chemistry in the Atmosphere Chemistry 142 B Autumn Quarter, 2004 J. B. Callis, Instructor Lecture #16.

Air Pollution from Electricity Production by Coal Burning PlantsCoal contains significant quantities of sulfur, which when burned produces sulfur dioxide:

S + O2 SO2;

SO2 can be further oxidized to sulfur trioxide:

2SO2 + O2 2SO3 (ozone)

Sulfur trioxide can combine with moisture to produce the corrosive H2SO4.

Page 13: Deviations from the Ideal Gas Law and Chemistry in the Atmosphere Chemistry 142 B Autumn Quarter, 2004 J. B. Callis, Instructor Lecture #16.

Sulfur Dioxide Scrubber Chemistry

Production of Lime: CaCO3 CaO + CO2

Capture of SO2: CaO + SO2 CaSO3

Page 14: Deviations from the Ideal Gas Law and Chemistry in the Atmosphere Chemistry 142 B Autumn Quarter, 2004 J. B. Callis, Instructor Lecture #16.

Sulfur Dioxide Scrubber

Page 15: Deviations from the Ideal Gas Law and Chemistry in the Atmosphere Chemistry 142 B Autumn Quarter, 2004 J. B. Callis, Instructor Lecture #16.

Answers to Problems: Lecture 16

1. Pideal = 57.745 atm; PvdV = 45.751 atm