Kinetic Theory of Gases (KTG)
1. Introduction
The Kinetic Theory of Gases explains the behavior of gases by assuming that they are made up of a large number of small particles (molecules) in constant random motion. It connects microscopic particle behavior to macroscopic properties like pressure, temperature, and volume.
2. Assumptions of Kinetic Theory
- Gases consist of tiny particles called molecules.
- Molecules are in constant random motion.
- Collisions between molecules and with the container are perfectly elastic.
- Volume of gas molecules is negligible compared to the container.
- No intermolecular forces act between gas molecules.
- Pressure is due to collisions of molecules with container walls.
3. Important Terms and Definitions
Pressure: Force exerted per unit area due to molecular collisions.
Temperature: Measure of average kinetic energy of gas molecules.
Root Mean Square Speed (vrms): A measure of average speed of gas particles.
R: Universal gas constant = 8.314 J/mol·K
4. Kinetic Energy and Temperature
The kinetic energy of a gas is directly proportional to its temperature. For a single molecule:
k: Boltzmann constant = 1.38 × 10-23 J/K
T: Absolute temperature in Kelvin
For n moles of gas, the total kinetic energy:
5. Derivation of Pressure Formula
For a cubic container of volume V and gas of N molecules:
Where:
- N = number of molecules
- m = mass of one molecule
- v2 = mean of square of molecular speeds
6. Degrees of Freedom
The number of independent ways in which a molecule can possess energy. It depends on the structure:
- Monoatomic gas: 3 degrees
- Diatomic gas: 5 degrees (3 translational + 2 rotational)
- Polyatomic gas: 6 degrees (3 translational + 3 rotational)
7. Maxwell-Boltzmann Distribution
Describes how the speeds of gas molecules are distributed. Most molecules have speeds around the most probable value, but some are much faster or slower.
- vmp = Most probable speed
- vavg = Average speed
- vrms = Root mean square speed
8. Real Gas vs Ideal Gas
Ideal Gas: Follows all postulates of kinetic theory perfectly. No intermolecular forces.
Real Gas: Deviates at high pressure and low temperature due to molecular size and attraction.
9. Daily Life Examples of Kinetic Theory
10. Summary Table
Term | Formula | Description |
---|---|---|
Pressure | P = (1/3)(N/V)mv² | Due to collisions of molecules |
KE (per molecule) | KE = (3/2)kT | Depends on temperature only |
RMS Speed | vrms = √(3RT/M) | Average speed of molecules |
Degrees of Freedom | f | Ways in which energy is stored |
Distribution | Maxwell-Boltzmann | Spread of molecular speeds |