Gases

39
Gases

description

Gases. Pressure is a force per unit area. For gas, F P= ------- A Force = (mass*acceleration) or F=ma F orce is expressed in Newtons (N) and area is expressed in square meters (m2) The SI unit of pressure is N/m2 is called Pascal (Pa) For liquid P = g ·h ·d - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Gases

Page 1: Gases

Gases

Page 2: Gases

States of Matter

A Solid - occupies a definite volume and has a definite shape.. -atoms are in close contact

A Liquid - has a specific volume but it assumes the shape of its container. - it has a ability to flow -the distances between atoms are greater than in a solid

a Gas - has neither a shape of its own nor fixed volume. It takes the shape and volume of its container.- Gas mixtures are always homogeneous - Gases are highly compressible.- The molecules of a gas are relatively far away each other.- Individual gas molecules have little interaction with their neighbors. - Gas molecules move freely in every dimension of space randomly

Number of gas substances are few,

vaporization is a process in which liquid molecules turn into vapor

condensation is a process in which gas molecules return from vapor to the liquid

Page 3: Gases
Page 4: Gases
Page 5: Gases
Page 6: Gases

Pressure is a force per unit area. For gas, F P= ------- AForce = (mass*acceleration) or F=ma F orce is expressed in Newtons (N) and area is expressed in square meters (m2) The SI unit of pressure is N/m2 is called Pascal (Pa) For liquid P = g ·h ·d

g = gravitational force 9.81 m/s2 h = height of a column d = density of a liquid

Page 7: Gases

Atmospheric pressure is measured by a mercury barometer.

1.0 atm = 760 mmHg = 760 torr = 1.01325 bar = 1.01325x105 Pa

At sea level, The standard atmospheric pressure is the pressure sufficient to support a column of mercury 760mm in height.

Page 8: Gases

In the laboratories, the gas pressures is measured by manometer.

Page 9: Gases

question : what is the height of a column of water that exerts the same pressure as acolumn of mercury 76.00cm high? Density of mercury is 13.6g/ml

question: a) convert to 0.357 atm to bar. b) convert 147200 Pa to torr

Page 10: Gases
Page 11: Gases
Page 12: Gases

Gas laws

Amount of gas, volume of gas, temperature and pressure are the fundamentals properties to determine the physical behavior of a gas.

Boyle’s law (the pressure-volume relationship)

For a fixed amount of gas at a constant temperature, the gas Volume is inversely proportional to the gas Pressure.

Charles’s LawThe temperature - volume relationship

The Volume of a fixed amount of a gas at a constant pressure is directly proportional to its absolute (Kelvin) Temperature.

Avagadro’s law ( the mole-volume relationship)

The volume of a gas varies directly with its molar amount at constant temperature and pressure.

Page 13: Gases

Pinitial . Vinitial = constant = Pfinal . Vfinal

•Boyle 1662

Page 14: Gases

Vinitial Vfinal

----------- = ----------Tinitial Tfinal

In 1848 William Thomson (Lord Kelvin) proposed an absolute temperature scale known as Kelvin scale. On this scale 0°K is called absolute zero, equals -273.15°C. T (K) = t ( C) +273.15

Charles 1787Gay-Lussac 1802

Page 15: Gases

P = 1 atm = 760 mm Hg

T = 0°C = 273.15 K

the standard temperature for gases is defined as 0 C=273.15K and the standard pressure is defined as 1atm=760mmHg.

These Standard conditions are usually abbreviated as STP.

1 mol gas = 22.4 L gasAt STP

At 1.0 atmosphere pressure and 0°C, 1 mole of any gas (i.e. 6.02 x10over23 gas molecules) occupies approximately 22.4 liters volume.

Page 16: Gases

If the proportionality constant is called "R",

Page 17: Gases

Values for the gas constant R

Units Value

L atm/mol K 0.08206

cal/mol K 1.987

J/mol K 8.314

m3 Pa/mol K 8.314

L torr/mol K 62.36

This equation is known as the ideal-gas equation . An ideal gas is a gas whose physical behavior is accurately described by the ideal-gas equation.

Temperature, T, must always be expressed on an absolute-temperature scale (K)

The quantity of gas, n, is normally expressed in moles

The units chosen for pressure and volume are typically atmospheres (atm) and liters (l),

however, other units may be chosen PV can have the units of energy:

Page 18: Gases

question : what is the pressure exerted by 0.508 mol O2 in a 15.0L container at 303 K?

question : what is the mass of propane, C3H8 in a 50.0L container of the gas at STP?

Page 19: Gases
Page 20: Gases
Page 21: Gases

Molar Mass and Gas Densities

PV = nRT and d = mV

PV = mM

RT

MP

RTV

m= d =

, n = mM

Page 22: Gases

question: calculate the molar mass of a liquid that vaporized at 100°C and 755 Torr yields 185mL of vapor with a mass 0.523g

Page 23: Gases

Mixtures of Gases

Pt is the total pressure of a sample which contains a mixture of gases

P1, P2, P3, etc. are the partial pressures of the gases in the mixture

Dalton’s law The total pressure of a mixture of gases equals the sum of the pressures that each would exert if it were present alone.

Page 24: Gases
Page 25: Gases

Partial pressure– Each component of a gas mixture exerts a pressure that it

would exert if it were in the container alone.

The partial pressure of a gas is equal to its mole fraction times the total pressure

the term (X1 = n1 / nt ) is the mole fraction of a substance in the gaseous mixture.

The mole fraction of a component expresses the ratio of the number of moles of one component to the total number of moles in the mixture.

Page 26: Gases

question : A gaseous mixture made from 10 g of oxygen and 15 g of methane is placed in a 10.0 L vessel at 25°C. What is the partial pressure of each gas, and what is the total pressure in the vessel?

question : the main component of dry air by volume N2 78.08%, O2 20.95% Ar 0.93% and CO2 0.04%. what are the partial pressures of each of the four gases in a sample of air at 1.00atm.

question : the total pressure of a gas mixture which containing 0.2 mol of CH4, 0.3 mol of N2 and 0.5 mol of H2, is 2atm. Calculate the partial pressures of each gases in atm.

Page 27: Gases

• Question: the reaction of aluminum with HCl produces Hydrogen gas,

Al (s) + HCl (aq) → AlCl3 (aq) + H2 (g)

if 35.5ml of H2 is collected over water at 26 °C and barometric pressure of 755.0mmHg, how many moles of HCl must have been consumed

Pwater= at 26 C is 25.2mmHg

Page 28: Gases
Page 29: Gases

0,37gr KClO3 was heated and O2 produced in this reaction wwas collected over water. The temperatuer of water is 23°C ve atmosferic pressure is 751mmHg. What is the volume of O2 collected over water. Vapor pressure of water at 23°C is 21,1mmHg

Page 30: Gases

P tot= P gas + P H2O

Page 31: Gases

• Particles are point masses in constant, random, straight line

motion.

• Particles are separated by great distances. the actual volume of

molecules is negligible.

• Collisions are rapid and elastic.

• No force between particles.

• Total energy remains constant.

• The average kinetic energy of the molecules is proportional to

absolute temperature

Kinetic Molecular Theory

Page 32: Gases

• Translational kinetic energy,

• Frequency of collisions,

• Impulse or momentum transfer,

• Pressure proportional to impulse times frequency

2k mu

2

1e

V

Nuv

muI

2muV

NP

2umV

N

3

1P

• Three dimensional systems lead to:

M

3RTu

uM3RT

umRT3

um3

1PV

rms

2

2A

2A

N

N

Page 33: Gases

M

3RTu rms

Molecular Speed The root mean square speed urms

Units for R must be 8.314 joule mol/Kfor M must be in kg

Page 34: Gases

question: determine the urms of O2 and H2 at 0C.

Page 35: Gases

Diffusion is the process of the mixing of gases with one another. Each gas spreads throughout the mixture until its partial pressure is the same everywhere

Effusion is a process in which a gas escapes from its container through a tiny hole.

Page 36: Gases

A

B

B

A

Brms

Arms

M

M

3RT/M

3RT/M

)(u

)(u

Bofeffusionofrate

Aofeffusionofrate

At a given temperature, the rates of effusion of a gas molecules are inversely proportional to the square roots of their molar masses. Effusion time and rates are inversely related.

Ratio used can be:– Rate of effusion (as above)– Molecular speeds– Effusion times

– Distances traveled by molecules

– Amounts of gas effused.

Page 37: Gases

question: if an unknown gas has a effusion rate 0.468 times the rate of O2 at the same temperature, what is the molecular weight of the unknown gas?

A

B

B

A

Brms

Arms

M

M

3RT/M

3RT/M

)(u

)(u

Bofeffusionofrate

Aofeffusionofrate

Page 38: Gases

Nonideal (Real ) gases• An ideal gas is a gas in which the volumes of the

molecules, intermolecular attractive forces and the loss of kinetic energy in collisions are neglected.

• Compressibility factor PV/nRT=1 for ideal gases. • Gases tend to behave ideally at high temperatures and low

pressures, and tend to behave nonideally at low temperatures and high pressures.

Deviations occur for real gases.PV/nRT > 1 - molecular volume is significant.PV/nRT < 1 - intermolecular forces of attraction.

Page 39: Gases

Substance a (L2 atm/mol2) b(L/mol)

He 0.0341 0.0237

H2 0.244 0.0266

O2 1.36 0.0318

H2O 5.46 0.0305

CCl4 20.4 0.1383