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The kinetic theory of gases is a theory that explains the macroscopic properties of gases by consideration of their composition at a molecular level.
PostulatesThe fundamental principles of the kinetic theory are given in the form of several postulates:
The above postulates accurately describe the behavior of ideal gases. Real gases approach ideality under conditions of low density and high temperature. PressurePressure is explained by the kinetic theory as arising from the force exerted by collisions of gas molecules with the walls of the container. The derivation of the mathematical expression for pressure is given below: Consider a gas with N molecules, each of mass m, enclosed in a cuboidal container of volume V. Suppose that a gas molecule collides with a wall of the container which is perpendicular to the x co-ordinate axis and bounces off in the opposite direction with the same speed (an elastic collision). Then the momentum lost by the particle and gained by the wall is given by
where vx is the x-component of the initial velocity of the particle.
and the total force on the wall is
where the summation is over all the gas molecules in the container. Since the particles are moving randomly in all directions, and since
for each particle, the expression for the total force becomes
This can be written as
where vrms is the root mean square velocity of the gas. Therefore, pressure, the force per unit area, equals
where A is the area of the wall. Thus, we have the following expression for the pressure
This result is interesting and significant because it relates pressure, a macroscopic property, to the average (translational) kinetic energy per molecule (1/2 mvrms2), which is a microscopic property. Note that the product of pressure and volume is simply two-third of the total kinetic energy. TemperatureThe above equation tells us that the product of pressure and volume per mole is proportional to the average molecular kinetic energy. Further, the ideal gas equation tells us that this product is proportional to the absolute temperature. Putting the two together, we arrive at one important result of the kinetic theory: average molecular kinetic energy is proportional to the absolute temperature. The constant of proportionality is 3/2 times Boltzmann's constant, which is the ratio of the gas constant R to Avogadro's number (independent of the gas). This result is related to the equipartition theorem. Thus the kinetic energy per Kelvin is:
At standard temperature (273.15 K) we get:
Examples:
Rms speeds of molecules etc.From the kinetic energy formula we find:
with v in m/s and T in kelvins. For standard temperature the root mean square speeds are:
The most probable speeds are 81.6% of these (e.g. for thermal neutrons 2131 m/s), and the mean speeds 92.1%, see also distribution of speeds. See alsoExternal links
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