Lecture 2 The Gas Laws
Lecture 2 The Gas Laws
Lecture 2 The Gas Laws
2. 2. BOYLE’S LAW
Robert Boyle, (1627-91), who was an “experimental philosopher”
in the early years of the Royal Society, made a very important contribution
in developing a description of the ideal gas (also developed ideas about
vacuum, atomic nature of matter, etc.)
In 1661, he showed that to a very good approximation that for a
constant amount of gas at a fixed temperature:
1 1
𝑝𝑉 = 𝑐𝑜𝑛𝑠𝑡𝑎𝑛𝑡 𝑝∝ , 𝑉∝
𝑉 𝑝
The pressure of a sample is inversely proportional to its volume,
and the volume of a sample is inversely proportional to pressure.
Boyle did thousands of experiments on air, due to the invention of
an air pump by his assistant, Robert Hooke.
Boyle and Hooke used a glass J-tube to examine the properties of
air.
Hg was poured into the column (at T) and air was trapped in the sealed end. When the pressure
exerted by the Hg was doubled, Boyle found that the volume of trapped air would reduce by half - leading to
the discovery of Boyle’s (or Mariotte’s) Law: pV = k at constant T
Isotherms: p vs V
Here are some plots depicting Boyle’s Law. Each plotted line corresponds to a different temperature,
and are known as isotherms, as they depict the other variables of the state function at a constant
temperature:
(a) (b)
Lines of
constant
volume are
known as
isochors:
This is the perfect gas equation, which becomes very accurate as the pressure decreases. This is a
limiting law, which increases in validity as p → 0. A limiting law is strictly true at a particular limit.
A real gas behaves like a perfect gas in the low pressure limit: at this point, the gas constant, R, can be
determined very accurately.
Surface of States
EXAMPLE 1
A hydrogen gas thermometer is found to have a volume of 100.0 cm3 when placed in an ice-water
bath at 0°C. When the same thermometer is immersed in boiling liquid chlorine, the volume of hydrogen at
the same pressure is found to be 87.2 cm3. What is the temperature of the boiling point of chlorine?
ANSWER:
238 K (which could also be written as -35°C)
EXAMPLE 2
Calculate the approximate molar mass of a gas whose measured density is 3.33 g/L at 30 ○C and 780
Torr.
SOLUTION:
From the ideal gas equation, the number of moles contained in 1 L of gas is
780
𝑃𝑉 ( 𝑎𝑡𝑚) (1𝐿)
𝑛= = 760 = 0.0413 𝑚𝑜𝑙
𝑅𝑇 0.008206 𝑎𝑡𝑚 − 𝐿
( ) (393𝐾)
𝑚𝑜𝑙 𝐾
The molecular weight is therefore:
3.33 𝑔 𝒈
( ) (0.0413 𝑚𝑜𝑙) (1𝐿) = 𝟖𝟎. 𝟔
𝐿 𝒎𝒐𝒍
𝑃𝑡𝑜𝑡𝑎𝑙 ∑ 𝑝𝑖 𝑜𝑟 𝑃𝑡𝑜𝑡𝑎𝑙 = 𝑝1 + 𝑝2 + ⋯ + 𝑝𝑛
𝑖=1
where 𝑝1 , 𝑝2 , … , 𝑝𝑛 represent the partial pressure of each component.
It is assumed that the gases do not react with each other.
𝑝𝑖 = 𝑃𝑡𝑜𝑡𝑎𝑙 𝑌𝑖
where 𝑌𝑖 the mole fraction of the i-th component in the total mixture of n components.
𝑉𝑚 (𝑇, 𝑝) = ∑ 𝑉𝑖 (𝑇, 𝑝)
𝑖=1
This is the experimental expression of volume as an extensive quantity. It is named after Emile
Amagat. Both Amagat's and Dalton's Law predict the properties of gas mixtures. Their predictions are the
same for ideal gases.
T and P
+ T and P
= T and P
VA VB VA + VB = V
𝑃𝑉𝐴 = 𝑛𝐴 𝑅𝑇 𝑃𝑉𝐵 = 𝑛𝐵 𝑅𝑇 𝑃𝑉 = 𝑛 𝑅𝑇
𝑽𝑨 𝑽𝑩 𝑽 𝒏𝑨 𝑽𝑨 𝒏 𝑩 𝑽𝑩
= = 𝒕𝒉𝒖𝒔 = = 𝒚𝑨 𝒂𝒏𝒅 = = 𝒚𝑩
𝒏𝑨 𝒏𝑩 𝒏 𝒏 𝑽 𝒏 𝑽
Wherein the volume of an ideal gas mixture (V) is equal to the sum of the component volumes (Vj’s)
of each individual component in the gas mixture at the same temperature (T) and total pressure (P) of the
mixture.
However, for real (non-ideal) gases, the results differ. Dalton's Law of Partial Pressures assumes that
the gases in the mixture are non-interacting (with each other) and each gas independently applies its
own pressure, the sum of which is the total pressure. Amagat's Law assumes that the volumes of each
component gas (same temperature and pressure) are additive; the interactions of the different gases are the
same as the average interactions of the components.
The interactions can be interpreted in terms of a second virial coefficient, B(T), for the mixture. For
two components, the second virial coefficient for the mixture can be expressed as:
𝐵(𝑇) = 𝑋1 𝐵1 + 𝑋2 𝐵2 + 𝑋1 𝑋2 𝐵1,2
where the subscripts refer to components 1 and 2, the X's are the mole fractions, and the B's are the
second virial coefficients. The cross term, B1,2, of the mixture is given by:
𝐵1,2 = 0 (Dalton's Law)
𝐵1,2 = (𝐵1 + 𝐵2 )/2 (Amagat's Law).
𝑝
𝑍=
𝑅𝜌𝑇
where, p is the pressure, ρ is the density of the gas, T is the temperature, and R is the gas constant.
For an ideal gas the compressibility factor is Z =1 per definition. In many real world applications
requirements for accuracy demand that deviations from ideal gas behaviour, i.e. real gas behaviour, is taken
into account. The value of Z generally increases with pressure and decreases with temperature. At high
pressures molecules are colliding more often. This allows repulsive forces between molecules to have a
noticeable effect, making the volume of the real gas ( Vreal) greater than the volume of an ideal gas (Videal)
which causes Z to increase above one. When pressures are lower, the molecules are more free to move. In this
case attractive forces dominate, making Z < 1. The closer the gas is to its critical point or its boiling point, the
more Z deviates from the ideal case.
EXERCISES:
1. A gas that behaves ideally has a density of 1.92 g dm–3 at 150 kPa and 298 K. What is the molar mass
of the sample?
2. A Dumas experiment to determine molar mass is conducted in which a gas sample’s P, θ, and V are
determined. If a 1.08-g sample is held in 0.250 dm3 at 303 K and 101.3 kPa: a. What would the
sample’s volume be at 273.15 K, at constant pressure? b. What is the molar mass of the sample?
3. A 0.200-dm3 sample of H2 is collected over water at a temperature of 298.15 K and at a pressure of
99.99 kPa. What is the pressure of hydrogen in the dry state at 298.15 K? The vapor pressure of
water at 298.15 K is 3.17 kPa.
4. The density of air at 101.325 kPa and 298.15 K is 1.159 g dm–3. Assuming that air behaves as an
ideal gas, calculate its molar mass.
5. The volume of a vacuum manifold used to transfer gases is calibrated using Boyle’s law. A 0.251-dm3
flask at a pressure of 697 Torr is attached, and after system pumpdown, the manifold is at 10.4
mTorr. The stopcock between the manifold and flask is opened and the system reaches an
equilibrium pressure of 287 Torr. Assuming isothermal conditions, what is the volume of the
manifold?
6. The decomposition of KClO3 produces 27.8 cm3 of O2 collected over water at 27.5 °C. The vapor
pressure of water at this temperature is 27.5 Torr. If the barometer reads 751.4 Torr, find the volume
the dry gas would occupy at 25.0 °C and 1.00 bar.
7. Balloons now are used to move huge trees from their cutting place on mountain slopes to
conventional transportation. Calculate the volume of a balloon needed if it is desired to have a lifting
force of 1000 kg when the temperature is 290 K at 0.940 atm. The balloon is to be filled with helium.
Assume that air is 80 mol % N2 and 20 mol % O2. Ignore the mass of the superstructure and
propulsion engines of the balloon.
8. It takes gas A 2.3 times as long to effuse through an orifice as the same amount of nitrogen. What is
the molar mass of gas A?
9. A gas mixture consists of 320 mg of methane, 175 mg of argon, and 225 mg of neon. The partial
pressure of neon at 300 K is 8.87 kPa. Calculate (a) the volume and (b) the total pressure of the
mixture.