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Kinetic Molecular Theory KMT Chapter 10 Gas Laws
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Gases Atmospheric gases are made up of : N 2 78% O 2 21% Other He, CO 2, H 2 etc What are the GREENHOUSE gases? CO 2 CH 4 H2OH2OH2OH2O Other (CFC’s, NOx, ozone)
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Pressure GGGGases fill a container uniformly. PPPPressure is Force per unit area PPPP= F x A TTTThe force of the collisions of the gas particles with the wall of their container. PPPPressure is measured by a barometer, or manometer. UUUUnits???
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Models vs Laws So far we have looked at Gas laws to predict the behavior of gases. Scientists have also developed a model that helps to explain the behavior of gases. Models are an approximation!!
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Kinetic Molecular Theory KKKKMT attempts to explain the properties of an ideal gas. KKKKMT is based on speculations of the behavior of individual gas particles.
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States of Matter Gas Liquid Solid
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States of Matter
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KMT of gases The particles are so small compared with the distance between then that the volume of the individual particles can assumed to be zero. (demo) The particles are in constant motion. The collisions of the particles with the wall of the container are the cause of the pressure exerted by the gas.
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KMT of gases The particles are assumed to exert no force on one another. (neither attracted nor repelled). The average Kinetic energy of a collection of gas particles is assumed to be directly proportional to the Kelvin temperature of the gas. Why Kelvin????
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Pressure and Volume (Boyles) For a given sample of gas at constant moles and temperature, pressure and volume are inversely related. With KMT, a decrease in volume increases the number of collisions increasing the pressure.
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Pressure and Temperature For an Ideal gas pressure is directly related to temperature. In KMT, An increase in temperature increases the speed of the particles allowing the particles to hit the wall with greater force and greater frequency.
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Volume and Temperature The ideal Gas at a constant pressure, the volume is directly proportional to temperature. In KMT, as the temperature increases, the speed and force of the particles increases. The only way to keep pressure constant is to increase the volume.
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Volume and the number of moles Ideal gas predicts the volume of a gas at constant temperature and pressure depends directly on the number of gas particles present. KMT, points out that the number of collisions is the pressure and if there is an increase in the number of particles that increases the number of collisions and pressure. To keep the pressure constant the volume must increase.
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The Meaning of Temperature The Kelvin scale indicates the average Kinetic energy of gas particles. WHY average? The exact relationship is PV/n=RT=2/3(KE) ave Or (KE) ave =3/2RT
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Average Kinetic energy
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Root Mean Square The average velocity of gas particles is special. The symbol u 2(with a line over it) is the average squares of the particle velocities. The square root of the number is the Root Mean Square velocity. u rms
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So what do we use RMS for? RMS is used to find the velocity of gas particles based on their mass. The units for R in this case are: 8.3145J/K mol Take home: speed is determined by both Temperature and Mass of particle
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Average speed of certain gas molecules at the same temperature
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Effusion and Diffusion Effusion: The passage of a gas through a tiny orifice. Diffusion: The rate at which a gas moves from area of high concentration to low concentration Demo!
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Graham’s law of effusion Larger molecules will migrate slower than a smaller molecule under a constant temperature. This is in direct violation of the KMT. REAL GASES
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Graham’s Law and Diffusion In diffusion, one may expect the gases to act similarly to effusion. NH 3 (g)+HCl(g) NH 4 Cl(s) Plug into Graham’s Law and find the relative rates of effusion to be 1.5 The actual ratio is less. Distance NH 3 =u rms NH 3 Distance HCl u rms HCl Sq root M NH3 M HCl M HCl Sq root 36.5 17 17=1.5
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Diffusion of a gas is more complicated than its rate.
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