AEROSOLS: gas under high pressure pushes liquid out when valve opened.
BIKE PUMP: compressing air into small volume β high pressure β inflates tyre.
β οΈ Common Mistake
Temperature in gas law calculations MUST be in KELVIN β not Celsius. Add 273 to convert. 0Β°C = 273 K, NOT 0 K. Pressure is caused by COLLISIONS of molecules with the walls β not by the weight or speed alone, but by the RATE and FORCE of collisions.
π Variables
pPressure (p) is measured in pascals (Pa)
VVolume (V) is measured in mΒ³ (mΒ³)
TTemperature (T) is measured in kelvin (K)
EkAverage kinetic energy (Ek) is measured in joules (J)
π Key Equations
p Γ V = constant (Boyle's Law, constant temperature)
p Γ· T = constant (constant volume, T in kelvin)
T (K) = T (Β°C) + 273
π Key Note
Gas pressure: caused by molecular collisions with container walls. Higher T β faster molecules β more frequent, harder collisions β higher pressure. Smaller V β more frequent collisions β higher pressure. Boyle's Law: pV = constant. T in kelvin: K = Β°C + 273. Absolute zero = 0 K = β273Β°C.
π― Matching Activity β Pressure and Particle Motion
Match each change to its effect on gas pressure (assuming everything else stays constant). β drag the symbols on the right to match the component names on the left.
Pressure increases
Drop here
Pressure increases
Drop here
Pressure decreases
Drop here
Pressure decreases
Drop here
Volume of container decreases at constant temperature β more frequent collisions with walls
Temperature of gas increases at constant volume β faster molecules, more forceful collisions
Volume of container increases at constant temperature β molecules travel further between collisions
Temperature of gas decreases at constant volume β slower molecules, less frequent collisions
β½ FIFA Worked Examples
Boyle's Law
A gas at 200 kPa occupies 3 mΒ³. The gas is compressed to 1 mΒ³ at constant temperature. Calculate the new pressure.
F
pβVβ = pβVβ (Boyle's Law β constant temperature)
I
pβ = 200 kPa, Vβ = 3 mΒ³, Vβ = 1 mΒ³
F
pβ = pβVβ Γ· Vβ = 200 Γ 3 Γ· 1 = 600
A
pβ = 600 kPa
π― Test Yourself
Question 1 of 2
1. Why does the pressure inside a tyre increase when a car has been driven for a while?
2. A gas is at 27Β°C and 100 kPa. It is heated to 327Β°C at constant volume. What is the new pressure?
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