Becca Liebendorfer,
Christine Davenport,
Ray Mai, Aliza Edelstein.
C-block
Gas Laws (Chapter 5)
Key Terms-
Pressure (P)- the force exerted per unit of surface area. P= force/area
Barometer- common device used to measure atmospheric pressure
Manometer- device used to measure the pressure of a gas in an experiment
Pascal (Pa)- SI unit of pressure
Standard atmosphere (atm)- another unit of pressure (large)
Millimeter of mercury (mmHg)- common pressure unit based on measurement with a barometer or manometer
1 torr= 1mmHg= 1/760atm= 101.325/760kPa= 133.322Pa
Ideal gas- exhibits simple linear relationships among volume, pressure temperature and amount
Boyle’s Law- V [is directly proportional to] 1/P (T and n fixed)
-at constant temperature, the volume occupied by a fixed amount of gas is inversely proportional to the applied [external] pressure
Charles’s Law- V [is directly proportional to] T (P and n fixed)
-at constant pressure, the volume occupied by a fixed amount of gas is directly proportional to its absolute temperature
Avogadro’s Law- V [is directly proportional to] n (P and T fixed)
-at fixed temperature and pressure, equal volumes of any ideal gas contain equal numbers of particles (or moles)
standard temperature and pressure (STP)- 0°C (273.15K) and 1atm (760 torr)
standard molar volume- 22.4141L or 22.4L (to 3SF)
ideal gas law- PV=nRT
universal gas constant (R)- a proportionality constant
8.314 kPa*L/mol*K= 0.08206 L*atm/mol*K= 62.36mmHg*L/mol*K
partial pressure- portion of the total pressure of the mixture, that is the same pressure it would exert by itself
Dalton’s Law of partial pressure- in a mixture of unreacting gases, the total pressure is the sum of the partial pressure of the individual gas
Mole fraction (x)- component in a mixture contributes a fraction of the total number of moles in the mixture
Kinetic molecular theory- draws conclusions through mathematical derivations
RMS speed- A molecule moving at this speed has the average kinetic energy
Effusion- the process by which a gas escapes from its container through a tiny hole into an evacuated
Graham’s Law of effusion- the rate of effusion of a gas is inversely proportional to the square root of its molar mass
Diffusion- the movement of one gas though another
- What is the density of a gas that is 1.996g with a volume of 1190cm3?
- .001677g/L
- 1.677g/L*
- 596.2L/g
- .5962L/g
- 3.200 g of a gas is 5.080 moles. What is its molar mass?
- 1.588 g/mol
- 16.26 g/mol
- .6299g/mol*
- 5.015x10-24 g/mol
- Oxygen gas effuses through a capillary in 2.00 seconds. An unknown gas of the same volume effuses in 4.00 seconds. What is the molar mass of the unknown gas?
- .0156 g/mol*
- .0313 g/mol
- 32.00 g/mol
- 64.00 g/mol
- In a closed end manometer, the mercury level was 540.mm higher on the closed end than on the gas end. What was the gas pressure?
- 1290 mmHg
- 210. mmHg
- 440. mmHg
- 540. mmHg*
- If the Thirsty Bird (think Gay Lussac’s gas law) dips his head in water and cools down from 50◦C to 30◦C, and the pressure in his belly was originally 1 atm, what was the pressure after his drink?
- 1.67 atm
- .938 atm*
- 1.07 atm
- .600 atm
- A snake balloon has .00100 moles of air in it and a volume of .100 mL. If I blow .028 moles of air into it, what is its volume?
- 2.80 L
- 28.0 L*
- .0357 L
- .3571 L
- T1=207K. T2=301K. n1=.400 moles. n2=.275 mol. Which law is this?
- Unnamed*
- Boyles’
- Charles’
- Graham’s
- An He molecule, weighing 4.0 g/mol at 200K has ____times as much K.E. as an H2 molecule, weighing 2.0 g/mol, at 200K?
- 1.00 times as much*
- 2.00 times as much
- .500 times as much
- 0. times as much
- H2 molecules (2.00 g/mol) at 200.K go ____as fast as He molecules (4.00 g/mol) at 600.K?
- .667 times as fast
- 6.00 times as fast
- 2.45 times as fast
- .817 times as fast*
- Charles’ law: a gas with a volume of 700.mL at 300.K has what volume at 383K?
- 621 L
- 789 L
- .789 L
- .621 L
Gas Law Questions
In an open end manometer with an atmospheric pressure of 37.8 kPa, the Hg level was 27.3 mm higher on the left. What is the gas pressure?
- 3.64 kPa
- 22.3 kPa
- 34.2 kPa *
- 35.8 kPa
At 27 degrees Celsius, a gas, was at 321 kPa, at what temperature would it be at 1.00 atm?
- 710 Kelvin *
- 435 Kelvin
- 813 Kelvin
- 127 Kelvin
7.36 grams of a gas occupies 2.67 liters at 17 degrees Celsius and 115.2 kPa. How many moles of gas is it?
a. .449 moles
b. .120 moles
c. .372
d. .132 moles*
What is the density of MgO at 731 K in 7.32 psi?
- .491 g/l
- .334 g/l*
- .234 g/l
- .329g/l
What is the molecular weight of a gas that has a mass of 13.2 grams, a volume of 3.7 liters, at 32 degrees Celsius, and 117 kPa?
- 68.2 g/mol
- 77.3 g/mol*
- 60.8g/mol
- 79.9 g/mol