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I. Physical Properties 12.1- Gases 12.1- Gases

I. Physical Properties

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12.1- Gases. I. Physical Properties. A. Kinetic Molecular Theory. kinetic-molecular theory: (def) theory of the energy of particles and the forces that act between them; based on idea that particles of matter are always in motion Kinetic molecular theory describes the motion of an ideal gas. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: I. Physical Properties

I. Physical PropertiesI. Physical Properties

12.1- Gases12.1- Gases

Page 2: I. Physical Properties

A. Kinetic Molecular A. Kinetic Molecular TheoryTheoryA. Kinetic Molecular A. Kinetic Molecular TheoryTheory

kinetic-molecular theory: (def) theory of the energy of particles and the forces that act between them; based on idea that particles of matter are always in motion

Kinetic molecular theory describes the motion of an ideal gas

Page 3: I. Physical Properties

A. Kinetic Molecular A. Kinetic Molecular TheoryTheoryA. Kinetic Molecular A. Kinetic Molecular TheoryTheory

ideal gas: (def) imaginary gas that perfectly fits the assumptions of the kinetic-molecular theory

Page 4: I. Physical Properties

A. Kinetic Molecular A. Kinetic Molecular TheoryTheoryA. Kinetic Molecular A. Kinetic Molecular TheoryTheory

Particles in an ideal gas…• have no volume.• have elastic collisions. • are in constant, random, straight-

line motion.• don’t attract or repel each other.• have an avg. KE directly related to

Kelvin temperature.

Page 5: I. Physical Properties

B. Real GasesB. Real GasesB. Real GasesB. Real Gases

Particles in a REAL gas…• have their own volume• attract each other• proposed by van der Waals

Gas behavior is most ideal…• at low pressures• at high temperatures• in nonpolar atoms/molecules

Page 6: I. Physical Properties

C. Characteristics of C. Characteristics of GasesGasesC. Characteristics of C. Characteristics of GasesGasesGases expand to fill any container.

• random motion, no attraction

Gases are fluids (like liquids).• no attraction

Gases have very low densities.• no volume = lots of empty space

Page 7: I. Physical Properties

C. Characteristics of C. Characteristics of GasesGasesC. Characteristics of C. Characteristics of GasesGasesGases can be compressed.

• no volume = lots of empty space

Gases undergo diffusion & effusion.• random motion

Page 8: I. Physical Properties

C. Characteristics of C. Characteristics of GasesGasesC. Characteristics of C. Characteristics of GasesGasesDiffusion: (def) process by which gases spontaneously spread out and mix with

other gases; lighter gases diffuse more quickly

Effusion: (def) process by which gases particles under pressure pass through a tiny opening; lighter gases effuse faster

Page 9: I. Physical Properties

A. TemperatureA. TemperatureA. TemperatureA. Temperature

ºF

ºC

K

-459 32 212

-273 0 100

0 273 373

32FC 95 K = ºC + 273.15

Always use absolute temperature (Kelvin) when working with gases.

Page 10: I. Physical Properties

B. PressureB. PressureB. PressureB. Pressure

area

forcepressure

Which shoes create the most pressure?

SI unit of force is the Newton

Page 11: I. Physical Properties

. Pressure. Pressure. Pressure. Pressure Barometer

• measures atmospheric pressure - at sea level,

height of column is

760 mm

- P of Hg is equal to the P of the atmosphere

Mercury Barometer

Page 12: I. Physical Properties

E. PressureE. PressureE. PressureE. Pressure

Manometer• measures contained gas pressure

- difference in height of tubes indicates the

gas pressure

U-tube Manometer

Page 13: I. Physical Properties

E. PressureE. PressureE. PressureE. Pressure

2m

NkPa

KEY UNITS AT SEA LEVEL

101.325 kPa (kilopascal)

1 atm

760 mm Hg

760 torr

14.7 psi

Page 14: I. Physical Properties

Pressure Pressure Pressure Pressure Unit Symbol Definitions

Pascal Pa SI Pressure Unit;

1 Pa = 1 N/m2

Millimeter of

Mercury

mm Hg P that supports a 1 mm mercury column in a barometer

Atmo-sphere

atm 1 atm = 760 mm Hg

= 101.325 kPa

Torr torr 1 torr = 1 mm Hg

Page 15: I. Physical Properties

C. STPC. STPC. STPC. STP

Standard Temperature & PressureStandard Temperature & Pressure

0°C 273.15 K

1 atm 101.325 kPa-OR-

STP

Page 16: I. Physical Properties

D. Dalton’s lawD. Dalton’s lawD. Dalton’s lawD. Dalton’s law

Dalton’s law of partial pressure:

• Ptotal = P1 + P2 + P3…+Pn

(n = number of gases in mixture)

**Total P exerted by collection gases is sum of pressure exerted by each gas