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Gas Laws. Chemistry Mrs. Coyle. Factors Affecting Gas Pressure. Number of Moles (Amount of gas) As the number of particles increases, the number of collisions with the container wall increases. Volume The smaller the volume, the greater the pressure exerted on the container. Temperature
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Gas Laws ChemistryMrs. Coyle
Factors Affecting Gas Pressure • Number of Moles (Amount of gas) • As the number of particles increases, the number of collisions with the container wall increases. • Volume • The smaller the volume, the greater the pressure exerted on the container. • Temperature • As temperature increases, kinetic energy increases, increasing the frequency of collision. Thus pressure increase.
Boyle’s Law P1V1=P2V2 T constant # moles constant P vs V hyperbola Isotherm High Temp P V
Charles Law V1 =V2 P constant T1 T2 # Moles constant Isobar V T (K)
Guy-Lussac P1 = P2 V constant T1 T2 # moles Constant isochoric P T
Combined Gas Law P1V1 = P2V2_ T1 T2
Ideal Gas Law: P V = n R T P = pressure Pa = N/m2 V = volume measured in m3 n =# of moles T = temperature K R=Universal gas constant =8.314 kPa L / (mol K) =0.0821 L atm/(mol K) =62.3 mmHg L/(mol K)
Dalton’s Law of Partial Pressures • Ptot=P1+P2+…. • Total pressure of a mixture of gases in a container is the sum of the individual pressures (partial pressures) of each gas, as if each took up the total space alone. • http://www.wwnorton.com/college/chemistry/gilbert/tutorials/interface.asp?chapter=chapter_08&folder=daltons_law
Ideal Gas Laws mostly hold at: • Low pressure • High temperature