Definitions [8]
The certain minimum value of temperature below which an object cannot be cooled, since the average kinetic energy of molecules has a minimum possible value of zero at this point, is called absolute zero.
The energy possessed purely by the motion of molecules in an ideal gas, where the molecules are non-interacting and hence there is no potential energy term, making the internal energy of the gas entirely kinetic in nature, is called the kinetic energy (internal energy) of an ideal gas.
The law which states that for any system in thermal equilibrium, the total energy is equally distributed among all its degrees of freedom, with energy \[\frac {1}{2}\]kT associated with each degree of freedom per molecule, is called the Law of Equipartition of Energy.
The average distance traversed by a molecule between two successive collisions, obtained by dividing the total distance travelled during nn collisions by the number of collisions nn, is called mean free path (λ).
The distance travelled by a gas molecule between two successive collisions, during which it moves in a straight line with constant velocity, is called free path.
Define mean free path and write down its expression.
The average distance travelled by the molecule between collisions is called mean free path (λ).
λ = `"kT"/(sqrt(2)π"d"^2"p")`
Define the term degrees of freedom.
The minimum number of independent coordinates needed to specify the position and configuration of a thermo-dynamical system in space is called the degree of freedom of the system.
The total number of coordinates or independent quantities required to describe the position and configuration of a system completely is called degrees of freedom (dof).
Formulae [2]
Let λ1, λ2, λ3,…λn be the distances travelled by a gas molecule during nn collisions respectively, then the mean free path is:
-
Inversely with the density (ρ) of the gas:
λ ∝ \[\frac {1}{ρ}\] -
Inversely with the square of the diameter (dd) of the molecule:
λ ∝ \[\frac {1}{d^2}\]
f = 3A − B
where:
- A = number of atoms in the molecule
- B = number of bonds between atoms
Theorems and Laws [2]
The average energy per molecule of an ideal gas is directly proportional to the absolute temperature T of the gas:
Statement:
For a gas in thermal equilibrium at temperature TT, the average energy associated with each molecule for each quadratic term (degree of freedom) is:
where kB = 1.38 × 10−23 J/K and T = absolute temperature.
Energy Expressions for Different Types of Motion:
-
Translational K.E.:
\[\frac{1}{2}mv_x^2+\frac{1}{2}mv_y^2+\frac{1}{2}mv_z^2\] (3 degrees of freedom — along x, y, z axes) -
Rotational K.E.:
\[\frac{1}{2}I\omega_x^2+\frac{1}{2}I\omega_y^2+\frac{1}{2}I\omega_z^2\] (up to 3 degrees of freedom — rotation about x, y, z axes) -
Vibrational K.E.:
\[\frac{1}{2}m\dot{u}^2+\frac{1}{2}kr^2\] (2 terms — kinetic and potential energy of vibration)
Each quadratic term contributes \[\frac {1}{2}\]kBT to the total average energy of the molecule.
Key Points
- In gases, the intermolecular forces are very weak, causing the molecules to move apart in all directions.
- Gases have no fixed shape and no fixed size — they can be obtained in a vessel of any shape or size.
- Gases expand indefinitely and uniformly to fill any available space.
- Gases exert pressure on their surroundings.
Concepts [14]
- Molecular Nature of Matter
- Gases and Its Characteristics
- Equation of State of a Perfect Gas
- Work Done in Compressing a Gas
- Introduction of Kinetic Theory of an Ideal Gas
- Interpretation of Temperature in Kinetic Theory
- Law of Equipartition of Energy
- Specific Heat Capacities - Gases
- Mean Free Path
- Kinetic Theory of Gases - Concept of Pressure
- Assumptions of Kinetic Theory of Gases
- RMS Speed of Gas Molecules
- Degrees of Freedom
- Avogadro's Number
