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Gases Describing Gases
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Review of Kinetic Theory
Particles in an ideal gas… gases are hard, small, spherical particles don’t attract or repel each other. are in constant, random, straight-line motion. indefinite shape and volume. have “perfectly” elastic collisions.
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Variables that describe a gas
Units Pressure (P) – kPa, mm Hg, atm, torr L , mL , cm3 Volume (V) – °C , K (convert to Kelvin) K = °C + 273 Temp (T) – Mole (n) - mol
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Gas Pressure - collision of gas molecules with the walls of the container
Atmospheric Pressure- collision of air molecules with objects
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Which shoes create the most pressure?
Which create the least? Why?
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Gas Pressure -- 3 ways to measure pressure:
atm (atmosphere) mm Hg kPa (kilopascals) 1 atm = 760 mm Hg = kPa U-tube Manometer How can we make these into conversion factors?
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Atmospheric pressure is measured with a barometer.
Increase altitude – decrease pressure Ex. Mt. Everest – atmospheric pressure is 253 mm Hg Vacuum- empty space with no particles and no pressure Ex: space
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Gases Kelvin Temperature Scale is directly proportional to the average kinetic energy, so Temperature is a description of the movement of particles (not how hot or cold it is)
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Standard Temperature and Pressure
STP Standard Temperature and Pressure Standard pressure – 1 atm, 760 mm Hg, or kPa Standard temp. – 0° Celsius or 273 Kelvin
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