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Published byJunior Terry Modified over 9 years ago
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VOLUME AND TEMPERATURE: CHARLES’S LAW 13.1: Pgs. 450 - 454
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Jacques Charles (1746-1823) First person to fill a balloon with hydrogen gas Made the first solo balloon flight His main discovery is shown in the graph…
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Plots of V (L) versus T (°C) for several gases. Volume increases when the temperature increases Direct relationship, as T, V
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Charles’s Law Charles’s Law: T is in Kelvins CANNOT CHANGE the pressure or amount of gas It tells us that the volume of the gas is directly proportional to the temperature on the Kelvin scale
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Plots of volume versus temperature As we cool gases, they eventually liquefy If we extend a straight line back, ALL lines reach zero volume at - 273 o C This suggests that -273 o C is the lowest possible temperature
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Absolute Zero and the Kelvin Scale Lord Kelvin proposed a new temperature scale based on this discovery Kelvin (K) scale: 1 K same size as 1 degree C, but zero point changed to -273 o C and became 0 K (not degrees) 260 o C becomes ___ K? 13K 0 K is lowest temperature theoretically possible Absolute zero represents zero kinetic energy All motion stops theoretically
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Example A balloon inflated in a room at 24 o C has a volume of 4.00L. The balloon is then heated to a temperature of 58 o C. What is the new volume if the pressure remains constant? If a sample of gas occupies 6.80L at 325 o C, what will be its volume at 25 o C if the pressure does not change.
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Gay-Lussac’s Law Studies the relationship between pressure and temperature “The pressure of a gas is directly proportional to the Kelvin temperature if the volume remains constant”
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Example The gas left in a used aerosol can is at a pressure of 103 kPa at 25 o C. If this can is thrown onto a fire, what is the pressure of the gas when its temperature reaches 928 o C? The pressure in an automobile tire is 198 kPa at 27.0 o C. At the end of a trip on a hot sunny day, the pressure has risen to 225 kPa. What is the temperature of the air in the tire? (Assume the volume has not changed.)
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