Survey							
                            
		                
		                * Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
December 9, 2009 •F i n a l E x a m R e m i n d e r s : •Date: Monday, December 14, 2009 •Time: 8:00-10:30am •Place: IRC 1 (Here) •What to Bring: Calculator #2 Pencil 2 Pages (double-sided) of notes •M a k e u p L a b - O n O W L , d u e a t f i n a l e x a m •T o d a y •Chapter 10: Gases •F r i d a y •Chapter 11: Intermolecular Forces and the Liquid State (Fri.) Kinetic Molecular Theory & Gases  Gas molecules far apart, always in motion, collide with walls of container (pressure)  Temperature  Average Kinetic Energy  Higher temperature = higher average kinetic energy  Kinetic energy and velocity are not the same  Higher molar mass will move slower at the same temperature  Boltzmann distribution Plot of molecular speed (x) vs. number of molecules (y)  Shows range of speeds in a collection of molecules  Gases- Equations from last time…  Kinetic energy of one molecule 1 2 KE  mv where m  mass , v  veloc 2  Average Kinetic energy of many molecules 12 3 KE  m v  RT 2 2 T  temperatur e in Kelvin , 8.3145 J 0.082057 L  atm R  gas constant   mol  K K  mol  Average speed of molecules 3 RT 2 v  v   8 . 3415 J / K  mol , M  mol ma in kg / m rms R M Gas Diffusion Gas Effusion  Graham’s Law of Effusion Graham’s Law Example A sample of ethane, C2H6, effuses through a small hole at a rate of 3.6 x 10-6 mol/hr. An unknown gas, under the same conditions, effuses at a rate of 1.3 x 10-6 mol/hr. Calculate the molar mass of the unknown gas. Back to Pressure…  Collisions between gas molecules and container exerts a force on container wall  More collisions and more energetic collisions = greater force = higher pressure  Kinetic molecular theory gives conceptual framework for understanding the behavior of gases   P and n P and T (P  n) (P  T) Today’s Temp: 35°F Pressure Gauge Today’s Temp: 85°F Pressure Gauge Back to Pressure…  Collisions between gas molecules and container exerts a force on container wall  More collisions and more energetic collisions = greater force = higher pressure  Kinetic molecular theory gives conceptual framework for understanding the behavior of gases     P and n P and T V and T P and V (P  n) (P  T) (V  1/T) (P  1/V) Volume of balloon at room temperature Volume of balloon at 5°C The Gas Laws  Boyle’s P1V1  P2V2 Ideal Gas Law PV  nRT  Charles’ V1 V2  T1 T2  Avogadro’s V1 V2  n1 n2 R  0.082057 L  atm K  mol  Using the Gas Laws  If you know 3 variables, solve for the fourth  If some properties are constant, trends in one property can predict another  STP (“Standard Temperature and Pressure”) T= 273 K  P= 1 atm   Strategy: Take note of the variables you know, find the appropriate equation, then “plug and chug” (or just remember PV=nRT and derive the appropriate equation every time) Examples 1. A gas has a volume of 3L at 2 atm. What is its volume at 4 atm? 2. A gas has a volume of 4.1 L at 127 C. What is its volume at 227? Examples 3. What volume does 7.4 grams of ethane (C2H2) occupy at standard temperature and pressure? 4. The propane tank of a camping stove contains 3,000g of liquid C3H8. How large a container would be needed to hold the same amount of propane as a gas at 25C and 2250mmHg?