Gas Laws: Pressure, Volume, and Hot Air: A Chemistry Lesson For 10 Grade Students Created by Warren Merkel
Gas Laws: Pressure, Volume, and Hot Air: A Chemistry Lesson For 10 Grade Students Created by Warren Merkel
Gas Laws: Pressure, Volume, and Hot Air: A Chemistry Lesson For 10 Grade Students Created by Warren Merkel
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Introduction
Welcome!
This interactive lesson will introduce
three ways of predicting the behavior of
gases: Boyles Law, Charles Law, and
the Ideal Gas Law. Never heard of
them? Dont worry thats the purpose of
this lesson!
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Navigation
Throughout this lesson, you will use buttons at
the bottom right corner of the page to navigate.
Takes you to the next page
Takes you to the previous page
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Main Menu
Lesson 1
Basic
Terminology
Lesson 3
Charles Law
Lesson 2
Boyles Law
Lesson 4
Review
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Opening thoughts
Have you ever:
Seen a hot air balloon?
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Opening thoughts
Have you ever:
Seen a hot air balloon?
Had a soda bottle spray all over you?
Baked (or eaten) a nice, fluffy cake?
These are all examples of gases at work!
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Properties of Gases
You can predict the behavior of gases
based on the following properties:
Pressure
Volume
Amount (moles)
Temperature
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Pressure
Volume
Amount (moles)
Temperature
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Pressure
Pressure is defined as the force the gas
exerts on a given area of the container in
which it is contained. The SI unit for
pressure is the Pascal, Pa.
If youve ever inflated a tire,
youve probably made a
pressure measurement in
pounds (force) per square inch
(area).
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Volume
Amount (moles)
Temperature
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Volume
Volume is the three-dimensional space inside
the container holding the gas. The SI unit for
volume is the cubic meter, m3. A more common
and convenient unit is the liter, L.
Think of a 2-liter bottle of soda to get
an idea of how big a liter is.
(OK, how big two of them are)
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Volume
Amount (moles)
Temperature
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Amount (moles)
Amount of substance is tricky. As weve already
learned, the SI unit for amount of substance is the mole,
mol. Since we cant count molecules, we can convert
measured mass (in kg) to the number of moles, n, using
the molecular or formula weight of the gas.
By definition, one mole of a substance contains
approximately 6.022 x 1023 particles of the
substance. You can understand why we use mass
and moles!
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Volume
Amount (moles)
Temperature
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Temperature
Temperature is the measurement of heator how
fast the particles are moving. Gases, at room
temperature, have a lower boiling point than things
that are liquid or solid at the same temperature.
Remember: Not all substance freeze, melt or
evaporate at the same temperature.
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Lets go!
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Boyles Law
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volume
pressure
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Doubling the pressure reduces the volume by half. Conversely, when the
volume doubles, the pressure decreases by half.
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Lesson 2 Complete!
This concludes Lesson 2 on Boyles Law!
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Charles Law
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temperature
volume
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Lesson 3 Complete!
This concludes Lesson 3 on Charles Law!
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Lesson 3 Complete!
This concludes Lesson 3 on Charles Law!
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Mission complete!