मराठी
Tamil Nadu Board of Secondary EducationHSC Science Class 11

Revision: Gaseous State Chemistry HSC Science Class 11 Tamil Nadu Board of Secondary Education

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Definitions [4]

Definition: Absolute Scale or Kelvin Scale

A temperature scale with absolute zero (zero kelvin) as the starting point is called the absolute scale or the kelvin scale.

Definition: Gas Equation

The volume of a given mass of a dry gas varies inversely as the pressure and directly as the absolute temperature.

V ∝ \[\frac {1}{P}\] × T or \[\frac {PV}{T}\] = k (constant)

If volume changes from V1 to V2, pressure from P1 to P2, and temperature from T1 to T2, then:

\[\frac {P_1V_1}{T_1}\] = \[\frac {P_2V_2}{T_2}\] = k (constant)

Definition: Ideal Gas Equation

“The relation between three properties of a gas, i.e., pressure, volume and temperature, is called the ideal gas equation.”

OR

The relation between the three properties of a gas - pressure (P), volume (V), and temperature (T) - expressed as PV = nRT, is called the ideal gas equation.

Definition: Liquefaction

The process of converting a gas into a liquid by applying pressure and/or reducing temperature is called liquefaction. The essential conditions are low temperature and high pressure.

Formulae [1]

Formula: Combined Gas Law

\[\frac{P_1V_1}{T_1}=\frac{P_2V_2}{T_2}\]

Theorems and Laws [2]

Law: Dalton's Law of Partial Pressures

The total pressure of a gaseous mixture equals the sum of the partial pressures of all individual gases.

PTotal = P1 + P2 + P3 +⋯

Partial pressure of a gas: Pi = xi × PTotal​, where xi = mole fraction of gas i

Pressure of pure dry gas: Pdry gas = PTotal − Paq, where Paq= aqueous tension (vapour pressure of water)

Law: Graham's Law of Diffusion

Rate of diffusion of a gas is inversely proportional to the square root of its molar mass.

\[\frac{r_1}{r_2}=\sqrt{\frac{M_2}{M_1}}\]

\[\text{Rate of diffusion}=\frac{\text{Volume of gas diffused}}{\text{Time required for diffusion}}\]

Key Points

Key Points: Ideal Gas Equation
  • An ideal gas has point-mass molecules, no intermolecular forces, and perfectly elastic collisions.
  • The Ideal Gas Equation, PV = nRT, combines all three laws into a single universal relationship.
  • The Universal Gas Constant R = 8.314 J mol⁻¹ K⁻¹ is the same for all ideal gases.
  • Real gases approximate ideal behaviour at low pressure and high temperature.
  • Always use absolute temperature (Kelvin) in gas law calculations. T(K) = T(°C) + 273.15
Key Points: Liquefaction of Gases and Critical Constants

Critical Constants:

Constant Meaning
Critical Temperature (Tc) The temperature below which a gas can be liquefied by increasing pressure alone; above Tc, liquefaction is not possible regardless of pressure
Critical Pressure (Pc) The minimum pressure required to liquefy 1 mole of gas placed at its critical temperature
Critical Volume (Vc) The volume occupied by 1 mole of gas at its critical temperature
 

A gas below its critical temperature is called vapourabove it is called a gas.

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