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Introduction to Gases. Chemistry—2 nd semester. Properties. All gases share some physical properties: Pressure (P) Volume (V) Temperature (T) Number of moles (n) These properties combine to describe the behavior of gases using the “gas laws”. Pressure.
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Introduction to Gases Chemistry—2nd semester
Properties • All gases share some physical properties: • Pressure (P) • Volume (V) • Temperature (T) • Number of moles (n) • These properties combine to describe the behavior of gases using the “gas laws”
Pressure • Pressure is the amount of force per given amount of area (P=F/area) • Greater forces exert greater pressure • When the area over which the pressure is exerted is decreased, the pressure is increased
Pressure Cont. • Pressure is the result of collisions of gas molecules and the sides of a container
Applications • Why is there more pressure on you the deeper you move in a body of water? • Why is it harder to breathe when you’re up in a mountain?
Applications • Why is there more pressure on you the deeper you move in a body of water? • There is more water pushing down on you. Greater force means greater pressure • Why is it harder to breathe when you’re up in a mountain? • The air is “thinner” which means there is less atmospheric pressure because there is less air pushing down on you
Atmospheric Pressure • The pressure exerted by the atmosphere on the earth • Decreases as you move up • About 15 psi (pounds per square inch) at sea level
Standard Pressure • “normal” atmospheric pressure at sea level • Standard Pressure: • 1.00 atm (atmospheres) • 101.3 kPa (kilopascals) • 760 mmHg (millimeters of mercury) • 760 torr
Standard temperature • Absolute temperature is measured in Kelvin (K) • 0 K is absolute zero • K = °C + 273 • °C = K – 273 • Standard temperature: 273 K
Ways to measure pressure • Barometer
Ways to measure pressure • Manometer
Kinetic Theory of Gases • A set of ideas (5 points) used to describe and explain the behavior of gases • Any gas that behaves exactly in this manner is called an “ideal gas” • There are not any “ideal gases” in real life. Real gases behave much like “ideal” gases unless they are under high pressure and temp.
Point One • Gases are composed of tiny particles called molecules • Molecules are so far apart that gases are mostly empty space • Because of this, gases can be easily compressed and mixed
Point Two • Gas molecules posses kinetic energy (KE=1/2mv2) • Gas molecules are in constant, random, straight linemotion
Point Three • Collisions between gas molecules and each other or the container are elastic • No kinetic energy is changed into another form of energy (like heat) • The pressure of an enclosed gas will NOT change unless its temperature or volume changes
Point Four • Molecules of a gas are not attracted to or repulsed by each other • They move independently of each other
Point Five • Individual molecules of a gas are moving at different speeds because they have different kinetic energies • The average kinetic energy (speed) is directly proportional to the temperature of a gas
Dalton’s Law of Partial Pressure • The total pressure of a mixture of gases is the sum of the partial pressures of the individual gases • PT = P1 + P2 + P3 + .......
Effusion • Effusion is the movement of gas molecules through an extremely tiny opening into a region of lower pressure • helium escaping a balloon • air leaking from a tire
Diffusion • Diffusion is the tendency of molecules to move toward areas of lower concentration until the concentration is uniform throughout the system • mixing of gases
Graham’s Law of Effusion • Molecules of lower molar mass diffuse and effuse faster.