Chapter 10
Chapter 10
Chapter 10
2-12
13, 14, 21, 23
27-30
31-33, 35, 37, 39, 41, 43
49, 51, 53, 57, 59, 61
63-65, 67, 69, 71, 75
77, 81, 83, 85, 87, 91
93, 95, 96, 97
104, 108, 110, 115, 116, 117, 121, 123, 129
Gases
Assume shape and volume of container
Highly compressible
Easily diffuse/mix
Liquids
Assume shape of container
Not very compressible
Easily mix
Solids
Keep shape
Incompressible
Diffusion (if any) occurs very slowly
The fundamental difference between states of
matter is the distance between particles. Because
in the solid and liquid states particles are closer
together, we refer to them as condensed phases.
The state of a substance at a
particular temperature and
pressure depends on two
antagonistic entities:
--- kinetic energy of the
particles (proportional to
the temperature of the
system)
--- potential energy
between particles (IM
attractions/repulsions)
Pressure is the amount
of force applied to an
area.
Atmospheric pressure
is the weight of air per
unit area.
P =
F
A
Pascals
1 Pa = 1 N/m
2
Atmospheres
1 atm = 14.7 lb/in
2
(psi) = 101325 Pa
Torr (or mm Hg)
760 torr = 760 mm Hg = 1 atm
Normal atmospheric pressure at sea level.
It is equal to
1.00 atm
760 torr (760 mm Hg)
101.325 kPa
A model that aids in our
understanding of what
happens to gas particles
as environmental
conditions change.
1. Gases consist of large numbers of molecules that
are in continuous, random motion.
2. The combined volume of all the molecules of the
gas is negligible relative to the total volume in
which the gas is contained.
3. Attractive and repulsive forces between gas
molecules are negligible.
4. Energy can be transferred
between molecules during
collisions, but the average
kinetic energy of the
molecules does not change
with time, as long as the
temperature of the gas
remains constant.
5. The average kinetic
energy of the
molecules is
proportional to the
absolute temperature.
What happens to pressure when volume decreases?
What happens when volume increases?
What happens to volume when temperature
increases?
What happens when temperature decreases?
What happens to volume when amount of gas
(moles) increases?
What happens when amount of gas decreases?
Boyle
Charles
Avogadro
The volume of a fixed quantity of gas at constant
temperature is inversely proportional to the
pressure.
PV = constant [when temperature and amount of gas
(moles) stays the same]
As volume decreases, the pressure increases (such
that product = constant)
P
1
V
1
= P
2
V
2
A plot of V versus P
results in a curve.
Since
V = k (1/P)
This means a plot of V
versus 1/P will be a
straight line.
PV = k
The volume of a fixed
amount of gas at constant
pressure is directly
proportional to its absolute
temperature.
A plot of V versus T will be a straight line.
V
T
= k
V/T = constant (or V = kT)
As temperature increases, volume increases.
V
1
/T
1
= V
2
/T
2
The volume of a gas at constant temperature and
pressure is directly proportional to the number of
moles of the gas.
Mathematically, this means V = kn
So far weve seen that:
V 1/P (Boyle)
V T (Charles)
V n (Avogadro)
We can combine these to get:
V
nT
P
The relationship
then becomes
which has the more familiar form:
PV = nRT
nT
P
V
nT
P
V = R
where the constant
of proportionality is
known as R, the gas
constant.
k (Boltzmann constant)
= 1.381 x 10
-23
J/K
Note units!
From the ideal gas law, PV=nRT, remember that
So you can use this general equation in many
instances
nT
PV
R
2 2
2 2
1 1
1 1
T n
V P
T n
V P