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Test your knowledge of gas phase chemistry with this interactive Jeopardy game. Learn about gas properties, laws, units, and more. Answer in the form of a question to earn points.
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Notes To Users • Don’t forget how Jeopardy! Works—instead of questions, the students are given answers and they get points for coming up with the questions. • You can edit this template by typing in the boxes, but you can only run the game in Slide Show view. • The game board slide is linked to all the other slides in the presentation. When you click a point value, the presentation advances to the answer slide for that value. Click anywhere on the slide after students guess the question, and the presentation advances to the question that matches the answer that was given. Click the question mark icon above “back to game” and the presentation takes you back to the game board. • While playing the game in slide show view, don’t try to use the four buttons that appear on the bottom left to navigate the game. They won’t ever take you back to the game board.
JEOPARDY Gas Phase Chemistry
Don’t Forget... …Your “answer” must be phrased in the form of a question!
CLICK HERE FOR FINAL JEOPARDY KM theory Gas Properties Gas in the real world Units Simple Laws 100 100 100 100 100 200 200 200 200 200 300 300 300 300 300 400 400 400 400 400 500 500 500 500 500
Topic 1 for $100 This is the name given to the relationship between Pressure and volume. What is…?
Boyle’s Law Back toGame
Topic 1 for $200 According to Charles law, when temperature of a gas increases, this also happens (if pressure and number of molecules are constant) What is…?
Volume increases Back toGame
Topic 1for $300 These are four measurable properties of gases What are…?
Pressure, volume, temperature, amount (number of moles) Back toGame
Topic 1 for $400 According to Avogadro’s law, when number of molecules of a gas double, this also happens (if pressure and temperature are fixed) What is…?
Good Answer! Volume doubles Back toGame
Topic 1 for $500 According to Lussac’s law, when temperature decreases, this also happens (if volume and amount are constant) What is…?
Pressure decreases Back toGame
Topic 2 for $100 An ideal gas particle has this volume What is…?
Zero volume Back toGame
Topic 2 $200 The temperature of a gas is a measure of the average _____________. What is…?
What is kinetic energy Back toGame
Topic 2 for $300 The collision between gas particles is assumed to be this. What is…?
Perfectly elastic collisions Back toGame
Topic 2 for $400 Water vapor is not well described by the ideal gas law, because water molecules ________ one another. What is…?
Attract Back toGame
Topic 2 for $500 Gas stops behaving ideally under these conditions of pressure and temperature What is…?
High pressure, low temperature Back toGame
Topic 3 for $100 A filled balloon weighs more than empty balloon because of this property of a gas. What is…?
Gas has mass Back toGame
DOUBLE POINTS! DOUBLE POINTS! DOUBLE POINTS!
Topic 3 for $200 DOUBLE POINTS This gas property explains the slow escape of helium from the tiniest pores of a balloon What is…?
effusion Back toGame
Topic 3 $300 This gas property explains why an open bottle of perfume can eventually be detected from the other side of the room. What is…?
Diffusion Back toGame
Topic 3 for $400 You could do this to decrease the density of air What is…?
Heat the air, increase temperature Back toGame
Topic 3 for $500 This gas has the highest lifting power of all gases. What is…?
Hydrogen Back toGame
Topic 4 for $100 Put a balloon in a vacuum pump, and these two properties are affected What is…?
Pressure decreases, volume increases Back toGame
Topic 4 for $200 Move an aluminum can from a hot plate, to an ice bath, and these two properties are affected What are…?
Temperature decrease, volume decreases Back toGame
Topic 4 for $300 This gas, present in the upper atmosphere, shields us from dangerous UV rays What is…?
Ozone Back toGame
Topic 4 for $400 A sudden drop in atmospheric pressure may indicate this weather condition What is…?
Rain storm Back toGame
Topic 4 for $500 A car tire, fully inflated in the summer, may do this when winter comes What is…?
Lose pressure, flatten Back toGame
Topic 5 for $100 This is the ONLY unit of temperature which should be used in the ideal gas equations What is…?
Kelvin Back toGame
Topic 5 for $200 This is the formula for converting from celsius to Kelvin temperature What is…?
K= C + 273 Back toGame
Topic 5 for $300 These are five possible units for measuring pressure What is…?