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Gas Laws Day 2

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Page 1: Gas Laws Day 2. Gas Law Foldable Fold the left and right to the middle. Cut along solid lines (but only to the crack!)

Gas Laws

Day 2

Page 2: Gas Laws Day 2. Gas Law Foldable Fold the left and right to the middle. Cut along solid lines (but only to the crack!)

Gas Law Foldable

Fold the left and right to the middle. Cut along solid lines (but only to the crack!)

Page 3: Gas Laws Day 2. Gas Law Foldable Fold the left and right to the middle. Cut along solid lines (but only to the crack!)

Dalton’s Law of Partial Pressure

The pressure of a mixture of gases is equal to the sum of the partial pressures of the component gases.

PTotal = P1 + P2 + P3….

Page 4: Gas Laws Day 2. Gas Law Foldable Fold the left and right to the middle. Cut along solid lines (but only to the crack!)

Example

A balloon is filled with air (O2,

CO2, & N2) at a pressure of

1.3 atm.

If PO2 = 0.4 atm and PCO2 =

0.3 atm, what is the partial pressure of the nitrogen gas?

Page 5: Gas Laws Day 2. Gas Law Foldable Fold the left and right to the middle. Cut along solid lines (but only to the crack!)

PTotal = P1 + P2 + P3….

Ptotal = PO2 + PCO2 + PN2

1.3 atm = 0.4 atm + 0.3 atm + PN2

PN2 = 0.6 atm

Page 6: Gas Laws Day 2. Gas Law Foldable Fold the left and right to the middle. Cut along solid lines (but only to the crack!)

The Combined Gas LawExpresses a relationship between

pressure, volume, and temperature (and moles) of a fixed amount of gas.

It takes all three gas laws: (Boyle’s,

Charles’s, & Avogadro’s) and combines them form one usable equation.

Page 7: Gas Laws Day 2. Gas Law Foldable Fold the left and right to the middle. Cut along solid lines (but only to the crack!)

The Combined Gas Law

P1 V1 = P2 V2

n1T1 n2T2

Page 8: Gas Laws Day 2. Gas Law Foldable Fold the left and right to the middle. Cut along solid lines (but only to the crack!)

Example 1A gas is cooled from 45˚C to 20˚C. The

pressure changes from 103 kPa to 101.3 kPa as the volumes settles to 16.0 L. What was the initial volume?

P1 = 103 kPa

V1 = ?

T1 = 45oC + 273 = 318 KP2 = 101.3 kPa

V2 = 16.0 L

T2 = 20oC + 273 = 293 K

Page 9: Gas Laws Day 2. Gas Law Foldable Fold the left and right to the middle. Cut along solid lines (but only to the crack!)

V1 = 17.1 L

P1 V1 = P2 V2

n1T1 n2T2

Page 10: Gas Laws Day 2. Gas Law Foldable Fold the left and right to the middle. Cut along solid lines (but only to the crack!)

Example 2 (on back of foldable)A 1.5 mole sample of methane was originally

0.5 L at 25˚C at 1.1 atm. If we decreased the volume of the container to 0.25 L, increased the pressure to 2.0 atm and added 2.5 moles, what would be the new temperature in ˚C?

P1 = 1.1 atm

V1 = 0.5 L

T1 = 25 + 273= 298 K

n1 = 1.5 moles

P2 = 2.0 atm

V2 = 0.25 L

T2 = ?

n2 = 1.5+2.5 = 4 moles

Page 11: Gas Laws Day 2. Gas Law Foldable Fold the left and right to the middle. Cut along solid lines (but only to the crack!)

T2 = 101.59 K – 273

= -171.41 ˚C

P1 V1 = P2 V2

n1T1 n2T2*** easier if you solve for T2 first THEN plug in the #’s ***

P1 V1n2T2 = P2 V2n1T1

P1 V1n2 P1 V1n2

= (2.0 atm)(0.25 L)(1.5 mol)(298K)

(1.1 atm)(0.5 L)(4.0 mol)

Page 12: Gas Laws Day 2. Gas Law Foldable Fold the left and right to the middle. Cut along solid lines (but only to the crack!)

Boyle’s Law: Pressure vs. Volume

At a constant temperature, the volume of a fixed mass of gas varies inversely with the pressure

P1V1 = P2V2 if T1 = T2

Page 13: Gas Laws Day 2. Gas Law Foldable Fold the left and right to the middle. Cut along solid lines (but only to the crack!)

Boyle's Law

0

500

1000

1500

1 2 3 4 5 6 7

Pressure (atm)

Vo

lum

e (

mL

)

InverseIndirect

Page 14: Gas Laws Day 2. Gas Law Foldable Fold the left and right to the middle. Cut along solid lines (but only to the crack!)

Pressure and Volume with constant Temperature

Changing the volume of the container changes the amount of space between the particles. The less space, the more the particles collide with each other and the walls.

Page 15: Gas Laws Day 2. Gas Law Foldable Fold the left and right to the middle. Cut along solid lines (but only to the crack!)

Uses of Boyle’s LawTesting materials stability and ability to

maintain their shape under force.Compressing gases for use in cooking

cylinders, SCUBA tanks, and shaving cream.Used to describe density relationships

between gases.

Page 16: Gas Laws Day 2. Gas Law Foldable Fold the left and right to the middle. Cut along solid lines (but only to the crack!)

ExampleIf a gas expands from a volume of 5 L

to 25 L at an initial pressure of 3.5 atm, what will be its new pressure?

P1 = 3.5 atm

V1= 5 L

P2 = ?

V2 = 25 L

Page 17: Gas Laws Day 2. Gas Law Foldable Fold the left and right to the middle. Cut along solid lines (but only to the crack!)

P1V1 = P2V2

V2 V2

P2 = (3.5 atm)(5 L)

25 L

P2 = 0.7 atm

Page 18: Gas Laws Day 2. Gas Law Foldable Fold the left and right to the middle. Cut along solid lines (but only to the crack!)

Charles’ Law: Volume vs Temperature

At constant pressure, the volume of a fixed mass of gas varies directly with the Kelvin temperature

V1 = V2 if P1=P2

T1 T2

Page 19: Gas Laws Day 2. Gas Law Foldable Fold the left and right to the middle. Cut along solid lines (but only to the crack!)

Charles' Law ( Vol v. Temp)

0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

0 200 400 600

Volume (mL)

Te

mp

era

ture

(K

) Direct

Page 20: Gas Laws Day 2. Gas Law Foldable Fold the left and right to the middle. Cut along solid lines (but only to the crack!)

Charles’ Law Graph

Temp decreases

Vol decreases.

Temperature (K)

Volume (mL)

546 1092

373 746

283 566

274 548

273 546

272 544

200 400

50 100

0 0

Page 21: Gas Laws Day 2. Gas Law Foldable Fold the left and right to the middle. Cut along solid lines (but only to the crack!)

Temperature and Volume with constant Pressure

Changing the temperature but requiring the pressure to stay the same causes the volume to increase.

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Uses of Charles’ Law

Describing the properties of gases, liquids, and solids at extremely low temperatures.

Hot air ballooningUsed to describe density

relationships of gases.

Page 23: Gas Laws Day 2. Gas Law Foldable Fold the left and right to the middle. Cut along solid lines (but only to the crack!)

Example

If 22.4 L of oxygen is heated from 23˚C to 50 ˚C, what is its new volume?

V1 = 22.4 L

T1 = 296 K

V2 = ?

T2 = 323 K

Page 24: Gas Laws Day 2. Gas Law Foldable Fold the left and right to the middle. Cut along solid lines (but only to the crack!)

V1 = V2

T1 T2

V2 = V1 T2

T1

V2 = (22.4 L)(296 K) = 20.5 L

(323 K)

Page 25: Gas Laws Day 2. Gas Law Foldable Fold the left and right to the middle. Cut along solid lines (but only to the crack!)

Absolute Zero

Temperature at which all molecular motion stops.

It is defined by 0 K or -273C. Scientists used Charles Law to

extrapolate the temperature of absolute zero.

Page 26: Gas Laws Day 2. Gas Law Foldable Fold the left and right to the middle. Cut along solid lines (but only to the crack!)

Avogadro’s Law: Volume vs. Moles

At a constant temperature & pressure, the volume of a gas varies directly with the moles

V1 = V2

n1 n2

Page 27: Gas Laws Day 2. Gas Law Foldable Fold the left and right to the middle. Cut along solid lines (but only to the crack!)

Avogadro’s Law

As the number of moles increases, the volume expands to make room for the additional gas

Page 28: Gas Laws Day 2. Gas Law Foldable Fold the left and right to the middle. Cut along solid lines (but only to the crack!)

ExampleIf 4.65 L of CO2 increases from 0.8 moles to 3.75

moles, what is the new volume of the gas?

V1 = 4.65 L

n1 = 0.8 moles

V2 = ? L

n2 = 3.75 moles

V1 = 4.65 L

Page 29: Gas Laws Day 2. Gas Law Foldable Fold the left and right to the middle. Cut along solid lines (but only to the crack!)

V2 = V1n2

n1

V2 = (4.65 L)(3.75 mol) = 21.79 L

(0.8 mol) (20 L)

V1 = V2

n1 n2

Page 30: Gas Laws Day 2. Gas Law Foldable Fold the left and right to the middle. Cut along solid lines (but only to the crack!)

Whew! My brain hurts!!!