Gas Behavior - Mother Teresa Regional School
Download
Report
Transcript Gas Behavior - Mother Teresa Regional School
Gas Behavior
Lesson 3, Chapter 2
Measuring Gases
When working with a gas, it is helpful to know its volume,
temperature, and pressure.
Gases easily contract or expand to fill it container.
Because gas particles move and fill the space available, the volume
of a gas is the same as the volume of its container.
Temperature is a measure of the average energy of random motion
of the particles of a substance. The faster the particles are moving,
the greater their energy, and the higher the temperature.
Even at average temperatures, the speed of particles of gas are still
very fast.
Gas particles constantly collide with one another and with
the walls of their container. As a result, the gas pushes on the
walls of the container.
The pressure of the gas is the force of its outward push
divided by the area of the walls of the container.
The firmness of a gas-filled object comes from the pressure
of the gas.
Pressure and Volume
Boyle found that when the pressure of a gas at a constant
temperature is increased, the volume of the gas decreases.
When the pressure is decreased the volume increases.
This is called Boyle’s Law
Example:You fill a balloon with a small fraction of helium gas
that the balloon can hold. As the balloon rises into the
atmosphere, the air pressure around the balloon decreases,
but the balloon expands. If the balloon was completely filled
before you let it go into the air, it would pop once it got very
high.
Pressure and Temperature
When the temperature of a gas at a constant volume is
increased, the pressure of the gas increases. When the
temperature is decreased, the pressure of the gas decreases.
Example: An 18-wheel truck needs a lot of air in their tires
to support the weight of the vehicle. On long trips, especially
in warmer weather, the truck’s tires can become very hot. As
the temperature increases, so the does the pressure of the air
inside the tire. If the pressure become greater than the tire
can handle, the tire will burst.
Volume and Temperature
Charles found that when the temperature of a gas is increased
at a constant pressure, its volume increases. When the
temperature of a gas is decreased at a constant pressure, its
volume decreases.
The is known as Charles’s Law
Example: page 60 in text
Gas filled balloon at room temperature
Gas filled balloon lowered into liquid
Nitrogen at -196 degrees
The balloon shrinks as
Gas volume decreases.
Before
After
When removed from the nitrogen, the gas warms and the
balloon starts to expand again.
Once the balloon reaches room temperature again, it takes
its original shape back