Gas Law Notes Chemistry Semester II Ideal Gas Law Combined Gas Law And Guy Lussac’s Law
Ideal Gas Equation The variables of the physical nature of gases: n : the number of particles (moles) P : pressure V : volume T : temperature expressed always in K
Ideal Gas Equation Charles stated that volume varies directly with temperature Boyle stated volume varies inversely with pressure So…combining these notions, we can set pressure * volume = to a constant * temperature, where the constant is the same every time it is calculated. Mathematically this is shown…
Ideal Gas Law Boyle’s Law pressure times volume = a constant Charles’ Law: volume is proportional to temperature Combining the two yields the ideal gas law Restated Ideal Gas Law: …
Ideal Gas Law nR is a constant, n is the moles and R is the universal gas constant R =8.31 L kPa /mol K
Ideal Gas Law Problem What is the volume of a container holding 2.00 moles of a substance at kPa and 500K?
Problem Set Up P = kPa V = ? n = 2.00 moles T = 500K R = 8.31 L kPa/moles K PV = nRT
Problem cont’d *V = 2.00*8.31*500 V = 9.99 L
Combined Gas Law Lab experiments are rarely at STP, usually mathematical corrections must be made. Corrections are made by multiplying of the original volume (V 1 ) by 2 ratios (1 for temperature and the other for pressure) The math derivation looks like this:
Combined Gas Law Or… Since n is the same on both sides of the equation…
Combined Gas Law
Combined Gas Law Problems A 7.51 m kPa and 5 °C should be corrected to STP. What is the new volume? P 1 V 1 = P 2 V 2 T 1 T 2
Set Up V 1 = 7.51 m 3 P 1 = 59.9 kPa T 1 = 5 °C P 2 = kPa T 2 = 0 °C V 2 = ? Find this Remember convert T to Kelvin! Now solve it!
Solution 59.9 * 7.51 = * V 59.9 * 7.51 * 273 = V * V 2 = 4.36 m 3
next question… Another problem: A helium balloon with volume = 410mL is cooled from 27 °C to -27 °C. P is reduced from 110 kPa to 25 kPa. What is the new V of the lower temp. and pressure?
Set Up V 1 = 410 mL P 1 = 110 kPa T 1 = 27 °C P 2 = 25 kPa T 2 = -27 °C V 2 = ? Find this
Answer V 2 = 1479 mL
Guy Lussac’s Law Guy Lussac’s Law relates pressure and temperature…. To be used when volume and moles are kept constant