Ideal Gas Law. Deduced from Combination of Gas Relationships: PV = nrt. where R = universal gas constant

Similar documents
Adiabatic Expansion/Compression

where R = universal gas constant R = PV/nT R = atm L mol R = atm dm 3 mol 1 K 1 R = J mol 1 K 1 (SI unit)

TODAY 0. Why H = q (if p ext =p=constant and no useful work) 1. Constant Pressure Heat Capacity (what we usually use)

Chapter 1. The Nature of Physical Chemistry and the Kinetic Theory of Gases

Chapter 5 - Thermochemistry

Gases. Properties of Gases Kinetic Molecular Theory of Gases Pressure Boyle s and Charles Law The Ideal Gas Law Gas reactions Partial pressures.

10/1/ st Law of Thermodynamics (Law of Conservation of Energy) & Hess s Law. Learning Targets

Chapter 5 Thermochemistry

CHEMISTRY. Chapter 5 Thermochemistry

Ch. 6 Enthalpy Changes

CH10007/87. Thermodynamics. Dr Toby Jenkins

Thermochemistry is the study of the relationships between chemical reactions and energy changes involving heat.

Chemistry Chapter 16. Reaction Energy

CHEM 1105 S10 March 11 & 14, 2014

First Law of Thermodynamics

Energy Relationships in Chemical Reactions

L = 6.02 x mol Determine the number of particles and the amount of substance (in moles)

GASES (Chapter 5) Temperature and Pressure, that is, 273 K and 1.00 atm or 760 Torr ) will occupy

First Law of Thermodynamics: energy cannot be created or destroyed.

The following gas laws describes an ideal gas, where

Chapter 19 Chemical Thermodynamics

Thermochemistry. Energy. 1st Law of Thermodynamics. Enthalpy / Calorimetry. Enthalpy of Formation

H = DATA THAT YOU MAY USE. Units Conventional Volume ml or cm 3 = cm 3 or 10-3 dm 3 Liter (L) = dm 3 Pressure atm = 760 torr = 1.

Enthalpy and Adiabatic Changes

10-1 Heat 10-2 Calorimetry 10-3 Enthalpy 10-4 Standard-State Enthalpies 10-5 Bond Enthalpies 10-6 The First Law of Thermodynamics

Exothermic process is any process that gives off heat transfers thermal energy from the system to the surroundings. H 2 O (l) + energy

Chapter 18 Thermal Properties of Matter

Lecture 2. Review of Basic Concepts

Gases: Their Properties & Behavior. Chapter 09 Slide 1

The Nature of Energy. Chapter Six: Kinetic vs. Potential Energy. Energy and Work. Temperature vs. Heat

Energy, Heat and Chemical Change

Chapter 19 Chemical Thermodynamics Entropy and free energy

Outline of the Course

Kinetic energy is the energy of motion (of particles). Potential energy involves stored energy (energy locked up in chemical bonds)

UNIT 15: THERMODYNAMICS

Measuring and Expressing Enthalpy Changes. Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall. Measuring and Expressing Enthalpy Changes. Calorimetry

Thermodynamic Processes and Thermochemistry

Chapter 19 Chemical Thermodynamics

Exam 4, Enthalpy and Gases

Chapter 6 Problems: 9, 19, 24, 25, 26, 27, 31-33, 37, 39, 43, 45, 47, 48, 53, 55, 57, 59, 65, 67, 73, 78-82, 85, 89, 93

10-1 Heat 10-2 Calorimetry 10-3 Enthalpy 10-4 Standard-State Enthalpies 10-5 Bond Enthalpies 10-6 The First Law of Thermodynamics

Thermochemistry: Heat and Chemical Change

Determining the Components of the Rate Equation aa + bb yy + zz

I PUC CHEMISTRY CHAPTER - 06 Thermodynamics

Chapter 5. Thermochemistry

Chapter 6: Thermochemistry

Chapter 8. Thermochemistry

Lecture 25 Thermodynamics, Heat and Temp (cont.)

Enthalpy. Enthalpy. Enthalpy. Enthalpy. E = q + w. Internal Energy at Constant Volume SYSTEM. heat transfer in (endothermic), +q

Thermochemistry Chapter 4

Determining the Components of the Rate Equation

Guided Notes and Practice- Topi 5.1: Calorimetry and Enthalpy Calculations

General Chemistry 1 CHM201 Unit 3 Practice Test

Major Concepts Calorimetry (from last time)

Useful Information to be provided on the exam: 1 atm = 760 mm Hg = 760 torr = lb/in 2 = 101,325 Pa = kpa. q = m C T. w = -P V.

Ch. 7: Thermochemistry

Energy Heat Work Heat Capacity Enthalpy

For more info visit

Chapter Elements That Exist as Gases at 25 C, 1 atm. 5.2 Pressure basic physics. Gas Properties

General Chemistry Review

Learning Check. How much heat, q, is required to raise the temperature of 1000 kg of iron and 1000 kg of water from 25 C to 75 C?

BCIT Fall Chem Exam #2

Topic 05 Energetics : Heat Change. IB Chemistry T05D01

Substances that Exist as Gases

Enthalpy Chapter 5.3-4,7

Thermodynamics - Energy Relationships in Chemical Reactions:

What is thermodynamics? and what can it do for us?

C H E M 1 CHEM 101-GENERAL CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 5 GASES INSTR : FİLİZ ALSHANABLEH

Heat and Thermodynamics. February. 2, Solution of Recitation 2. Consider the first case when air is allowed to expand isothermally.

Chemistry 163B Winter Lectures 2-3. Heat and Work

Chapter 19 Chemical Thermodynamics Entropy and free energy

Gases. Chapter 11. Preview. 27-Nov-11

Chemistry I Practice Exam

Unit 7 Thermochemistry Chemistry 020, R. R. Martin

Kwantlen Polytechnic University Chemistry 1105 S10 Spring Term Test No. 3 Thursday, April 4, 2013

Chapter 11. Thermochemistry. 1. Let s begin by previewing the chapter (Page 292). 2. We will partner read Pages

MCGILL UNIVERSITY FACULTY OF SCIENCE MIDTERM EXAMINATION CHEM 120 MONDAY MARCH 16, :30PM 8:30PM VERSION NUMBER: 1

Properties of Gases. assume the volume and shape of their containers. most compressible of the states of matter

. (10 points) A lab worker had three gas cylinders. One she knew contained neon, but the other two had no identifying labels. She allowed all three ga

Gases! n Properties! n Kinetic Molecular Theory! n Variables! n The Atmosphere! n Gas Laws!

LECTURE 4 Variation of enthalpy with temperature

Gases and Kinetic Molecular Theory

THERMOCHEMISTRY -1. Dr. Sapna Gupta

Chapter 6 Thermochemistry 許富銀

Quiz I: Thermodynamics

Chapter 15 Thermal Properties of Matter

THE SECOND LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS. Professor Benjamin G. Levine CEM 182H Lecture 5

Thermodynamics I - Enthalpy

CHAPTER 10: THERMOCHEMISTRY

Thermochemistry Ch. 8

1. State in your own terms what is the first law of thermodynamics, a closed system, an isolated system, surroundings, heat, work, and energy.

- The empirical gas laws (including the ideal gas equation) do not always apply.

Chapter 8. Thermochemistry 강의개요. 8.1 Principles of Heat Flow. 2) Magnitude of Heat Flow. 1) State Properties. Basic concepts : study of heat flow

Thermochemistry. Energy. 1st Law of Thermodynamics. Enthalpy / Calorimetry. Enthalpy of Formation

Chapter 6. Energy Thermodynamics

ANSWER KEY. Chemistry 25 (Spring term 2016) Midterm Examination

CHEMISTRY Practice Exam #3 - SPRING 2013

Chemistry Slide 1 of 33

This reaction is ENDOTHERMIC. Energy is being transferred from the room/flask/etc. (the SURROUNDINGS) to the reaction itself (the SYSTEM).

Name Chem 161, Section: Group Number: ALE 27. Hess s Law. (Reference: Chapter 6 - Silberberg 5 th edition)

Transcription:

Ideal Gas Law Deduced from Combination of Gas Relationships: V 1/P, Boyle's Law V T, Charles's Law V n, Avogadro's Law Therefore, V nt/p or PV nt PV = nrt where R = universal gas constant The empirical Equation of State for an Ideal Gas

Boyle s Law (experimental) PV = constant (hyperbolae) T 4 Is T 4 > or < T 1?? Temp T 1

Ideal Gas Equation of State

Ideal Gas Law PV = nrt where R = universal gas constant R = PV/nT R = 0.0821 atm L mol 1 K 1 R = 0.0821 atm dm 3 mol 1 K 1 R = 8.314 J mol 1 K 1 (SI unit) Standard molar volume = 22.4 L mol 1 at 0 C and 1 atm Real gases approach ideal gas behavior at low P & high T

General Principle!! Energy is distributed among accessible configurations in a random process. The ergodic hypothesis Consider fixed total energy with multiple particles and various possible energies for the particles. Determine the distribution that occupies the largest portion of the available Phase Space. That is the observed distribution.

Energy Randomness is the basis* of an exponential distribution of occupied energy levels n(e) A exp[-e/<e>] Average Energy <E> ~ k B T n(e) A exp[-e/k B T] This energy distribution is known as the Boltzmann Distribution. * Shown later when we study statistical mechanics.

Maxwell Speed Distribution Law = π 2π k T B 32 1 dn m 4 ue 2 N du mu 2 2k T B 1 dn is the fraction of molecules per unit speed interval N du

Maxwell Speed Distribution Law Most probable speed, u dn 2 mp du = 0 for u = u u = mp mp kt m Average speed, <u> or ū ( ) u = u N u du = 0 8kT π m Mean squared speed, <u 2 2 2 > ( ) u = u N u du = 0 3kT m Root mean square speed u rms = u = 2 3 kt m

Distinguish between System & Surroundings

Internal Energy Internal Energy (U) is the sum of all potential and kinetic energy for all particles in a system U is a state function Depends only on current state, not on path U = U final - U initial

Internal Energy, Heat, and Work If heat (q) is absorbed by the system, and work (w) is done on the system, the increase in internal energy (U) is given by: U = q (heat absorbed by the system) + w (work done on the system)

Reversible and Irreversible Work Reversible or Irreversible Processes Reversible: carried out through a sequence of equilibrium states Irreversible: anything else!

Internal Energy (2) U is a state function It depends only on state, not on path to get there U = U final - U initial This means mathematically that du is an exact differential: U = du For now, consider a system of constant composition. U can then be regarded as a function of V, T and P. Because there is an equation of state relating them, any two are sufficient to characterize U. So we could have U(P,V), U(P,T) or U(V,T). f i

Enthalpy Defined Enthalpy, H U + PV At Constant P, H = U + P V U = q + w q= q P = U - w, w = -P V q P = U + P V= H At constant V, q = U = H

Comparing H and U at constant P H = U + P V 1. Reactions that do not involve gases V 0 and H U 2. Reactions in which n gas = 0 V 0 and H U 3. Reactions in which n gas 0 V 0 and H U

Heat Capacity at Constant Volume or Pressure C V = dq V /dt = ( U/ T) V Partial derivative of internal energy with respect to T at constant V C P = dq P /dt = ( H/ T) P Partial derivative of enthalpy with respect to T at constant P Ideal Gas: C P = C V + nr

Heat Capacity, C Heat Capacity (J K -1 ) Heat needed to raise T of system by 1 K q = C T Specific Heat Capacity (J K -1 kg -1 ) Heat needed to raise T of 1 kg by 1 K q = C S m T Molar Heat Capacity (J K -1 mol -1 ) Heat needed to raise T of 1 mole by 1 K q = C m n T

Endothermic & Exothermic Processes H = H final - H initial H Positive Positive amount of heat absorbed by the system Endothermic Process H Negative Negative amount of heat absorbed (i.e. heat released by the system) Exothermic Process

Thermochemical Equations CH 4 (g) + 2 O 2 (g) CO 2 (g) + 2 H 2 O (l) (a combustion reaction) c H = 890 kj Reaction must be balanced Phases must be specified H is an extensive property Sign of H changes when reaction is reversed

Standard State The Standard State of an element is defined to be the form in which it is most stable at 25 C and 1 bar pressure Some Standard States of elements: Hg (l) O 2 (g) Cl 2 (g) Ag (s) C (graphite) The standard enthalpy of formation ( f H ) of an element in its standard state is defined to be zero.

Enthalpies of Formation The standard enthalpy of formation ( f H ) of a compound is the enthalpy change for the formation of one mole of compound from the elements in their standard state. Designated by superscript o, Ø, or o: H,.. For example, CO 2 : C (graphite) + O 2 (g) CO 2 (g) rxn H = -393.5 kj/mol Table 2.7 f H CO 2 (g) = -393.5 kj/mol

Enthalpies of Reaction The enthalpy of reaction can be calculated from the enthalpies of formation of the reactants and products rxn H O = f H O (Products) - f H O (Reactants)

Example: Find rxn H (using Standard Enthalpies of Formation) CH 4 (g) + 2 O 2 (g) CO 2 (g) + 2 H 2 O (l) f H (from Tables 2.4&5, text): CH 4 (g) -74.6 kj/mol O 2 (g) 0 CO 2 (g) -393.5 H 2 O (l) -285.8 rxn H = -393.5-2 (285.8) 0 (-74.6) kj/mol Therefore, rxn H = -890.5 kj/mol

Exam 1 ~ 5 problems (weights given) budget your time Closed book Don t memorize formulas/constants You will be given things you need I would assume that you could derive PV work in an isothermal process. I would not assume that you could derive the Maxwellian distribution. Exam will not be heavily numeric, but will emphasize concepts If a problem seems lengthy, do another problem & come back later Understanding homework will be useful EXAM held in JILA Auditorium, Oct 1, 10 AM