The ABCs of gas Avogadro Boyle Charles Brian Bennett

Transcriber: tom carter
Reviewer: Bedirhan Cinar

In society, we have to follow laws that maintain order.

Did you know all chemical matter follows certain laws as well?

In fact, we can describe those laws by looking at relationships.

Some easy laws to begin with are the ones that govern the gases.

Back in 1662, Robert Boyle realized that gases had an interesting response

when he put them into containers and changed their volume.

Take an empty bottle and put the cap on it, closing that container.

Now squeeze your bottle, and what happens?

The pressure inside the bottle increases when the size of the container decreases.

You can only crush that container so much until the gases inside push back on your hand.

This is called an inverse proportion, and it changes at the same rate for every gas.

Boyle’s law allows chemists to predict the volume of any gas at any given pressure

because the relationship is always the same.

In 1780, Jacques Charles noticed a different relationship between gases and their temperature.

If you’ve ever seen a hot-air balloon, you’ve seen this law in action.

When the ballons are laid out, they’re totally flat.

Instead of blowing the balloon up like a party balloon, they use a giant flame to heat the air inside that envelope.

As the air is heated up, the balloon begins to inflate as the gas volume increases.

The hotter the gas becomes, the larger the volume, and that’s Charles' law.

Notice this law is different from Boyle’s.

Charles' law is a direct relationship.

As the temperature increases, the volume increases as well.

The third law is also easily demonstrated.

When you’re blowing up party balloons, the volume increases.

As you are blowing, you’re forcing more and more gas particles into the balloon from your lungs.

This causes the balloon volume to increase. This is Avogadro’s law in action.

As the number of particles of gas added to a container are increased,

the volume will increase as well.

If you add too many particles, well, you know what happens next.

Laws are everywhere, even in the tiniest particles of gas.

If you squeeze them, the pressure will increase as the particles are pushed together.

Low volume means a high pressure because those particles push back.

As the temperature increases, gases move away from one another, and the volume increases as well.

Finally, if you add gas to a closed container, that container’s volume will expand.

But be careful not to add too much, because otherwise you could end up with a burst balloon.

抄写员:tom carter
审稿人:Bedirhan Cinar

在社会上,我们必须遵守维持秩序的法律。

你知道所有的化学物质也都遵循一定的规律吗?

事实上,我们可以通过观察关系来描述这些规律。

一些简单的法律开始是管理气体的法律。

早在 1662 年,罗伯特·博伊尔就意识到,

当他将气体放入容器并改变其体积时,会产生一种有趣的反应。

拿一个空瓶子,盖上盖子,关闭容器。

现在挤压你的瓶子,会发生什么?

当容器尺寸减小时,瓶子内的压力会增加。

您只能将那个容器压碎这么多,直到里面的气体推回您的手上。

这被称为反比例,它对每种气体以相同的速率变化。

波义耳定律允许化学家在任何给定压力下预测任何气体的体积,

因为这种关系总是相同的。

1780 年,雅克查尔斯注意到气体与其温度之间的不同关系。

如果您曾经看过热气球,那么您已经看到了这条法律的实际应用。

当气球被放置时,它们是完全平坦的。

他们没有像派对气球那样将气球吹起来,而是使用巨大的火焰来加热信封内的空气。

随着空气被加热,随着气体体积的增加,气球开始膨胀。

气体变得越热,体积就越大,这就是查尔斯定律。

请注意,这条定律与博伊尔的不同。

查尔斯定律是直接关系。

随着温度的升高,体积也会增加。

第三定律也很容易证明。

当你吹派对气球时,音量会增加。

当你吹气时,你会迫使越来越多的气体粒子从你的肺部进入气球。

这导致气球体积增加。 这就是阿伏伽德罗定律的作用。

随着添加到容器中的气体颗粒数量的增加

,体积也会增加。

如果你添加了太多的粒子,那么,你知道接下来会发生什么。

规律无处不在,即使在最微小的气体颗粒中也是如此。

如果你挤压它们,压力会随着颗粒被推到一起而增加。

低体积意味着高压力,因为这些颗粒会向后推。

随着温度升高,气体彼此远离,体积也随之增加。

最后,如果您将气体添加到封闭容器中,该容器的体积会膨胀。

但注意不要添加太多,否则你可能会得到一个爆裂的气球。