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HL CHEMISTRY HL1-8.ppt Gas Laws

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HL1-8.ppt Gas Laws. HL Chemistry. Review – Avogadro’s Law. Avogadro’s Law: Equal volumes of gases at the same T & P contain the same number of molecules . (which means that coefficients in a balanced equation can be ‘read’ as volumes of gases). Review – Molar Volume. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: HL Chemistry

HL CHEMISTRYHL1-8.pptGas Laws

Page 2: HL Chemistry

Review – Avogadro’s LawAvogadro’s Law:

Equal volumes of gases at the same T & P contain the same number of molecules.

(which means that coefficients in a balanced equation can be ‘read’ as volumes of gases)

Page 3: HL Chemistry

Review – Molar Volume1 mole of any gas takes up 22.4 dm3 of space at STP

Standard Temperature (273K or 0oC)& Pressure (101 kPa or 1 atm)

VSTP = 22.4 dm3 / mol

Which can be rearranged…n = VSTP / 22.4 dm3 mol

Page 4: HL Chemistry

Review – Molar Volume1 mole of any gas takes up 22.4 dm3 of space at STP

Standard Temperature (273K or 0oC)& Pressure (101 kPa or 1 atm)

VSTP = 22.4 dm3 / mol

Which can be rearranged…n = VSTP / 22.4 dm3 mol

Page 5: HL Chemistry

Other applications of Avagadro’s law &/or Molar Volume:1. Determine number of moles (or g) of a given

volume of gas at STP. (1.4.2 # 3, part of 5, part of 7)

2. Determine volume of a known quantity (mol or g) of a gas at STP (1.4.2 # 4, part of # 10)

3. Calculate molar mass given information about moles (or g) and volume… and knowing molar volume (1.4.2 # 8)

4. Determine density of a gas at STP (1.4.2 # 9)

Page 6: HL Chemistry

The Ideal Gas Law Q – Can all gases be considered ‘ideal’? Most real gases act ideally under normal

conditions. They tend to act less ideally when:

They have high molar masses Why?

They are at very high pressures Why?

They are at very low temperatures Why?

Page 7: HL Chemistry

Which of these gases would act the least ideally?

Page 8: HL Chemistry

The Ideal Gas Law PV=nRT where

P = pressure in kPaV = volume in dm3 (Litres)n = moles of gasR = universal gas constant

○ (8.314 kPa dm3 mol-1 K-1)○ (0.0821 if you’re using atm, which you won’t in

IB…)T = temperature in K

Page 9: HL Chemistry

Pressure - You want pressure in kPa…

What do you do if it is given in mm Hg?

What do you do if it is given in atm?

Page 10: HL Chemistry

The Ideal Gas Law As long as you can remember PV=nRT,

you can derive all of the other gas laws. If the number of moles of gas is not

changing, we can just solve for n.n=PV/RT

Since the moles aren’t changing, we can set the right side of the equation equal to itself.P1V1/RT1= P2V2/RT2 and because R is the

same…P1V1/T1= P2V2/T2 (combined gas law)

Page 11: HL Chemistry

If you have a problem where one of these variables is held constant, you can simplify the combined gas law by eliminating that variable:

P1 V1 / T1 = P2 V2 / T2

P1 V1 = P2 V2

V1 / T1 = V2 / T2

P1 / T1 = P2 / T2

Page 12: HL Chemistry

We now have this collection of gas laws:

P1V1/T1=P2V2/T2 (Combined Gas Law)

P1V1=P2V2 (Boyle’s Law)

V1/T1=V2/T2 (Charles’ Law)

P1/T1=P2/T2 (Gay Lussac’s Law)

Page 13: HL Chemistry

Gas Laws TIP #1: Always use K for temperatures because it is an “absolute” scale (no negatives)T

Gas Laws TIP #2: If P or V are on both sides, the units don’t matter as long as they are the same on both sides.

Gas Laws TIP #3: You must be VERY careful with your units when using the Ideal Gas Law!

Page 14: HL Chemistry

Your Assignment: Read pp. 21-26 Do Ex 1.4.3

on pp. 25-26# 1-10 Identify which gas law you are using to solve

the problem… then solve the problem . Show your work…. (at minimum include the set up using some form of a gas law)

Page 15: HL Chemistry
Page 16: HL Chemistry

Charles Law Charles's law is an experimental gas law

which describes how gases tend to expand when heated. It was first published by French natural philosopher Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac in 1802, although he credits the discovery to unpublished work from the 1780s by Jacques Charles.

Page 17: HL Chemistry

Charles Law T V The following is a more useful way of

expressing this law.

Page 18: HL Chemistry

Create a hypothesis for what happened here.

Page 19: HL Chemistry

Here’s what really happened.1. Workers used hot pressurized water to

clean the tanker car.2. Tank was drained.3. Door was closed and tanker was left

overnight.4. Temperature inside the car plummeted

overnight.5. V/T=V/T (Temp goes down, Volume

must go down also)