
Dalton's Law of Partial Pressures
The ideal gasA hypothetical gas for which the relationship among the pressure, volume, temperature, and chemical amount (moles) can be described by simple proportionalities summarized by the ideal gas equation, PV = nRT. law can also be rearranged to show that the pressureForce per unit area; in gases arising from the force exerted by collisions of gas molecules with the wall of the container. of a gas is proportional to the amount of gas:
Thus the factor RT/V may be used to interconvert amount of substanceA material that is either an element or that has a fixed ratio of elements in its chemical formula. and pressure in a container of specified volume and temperatureA physical property that indicates whether one object can transfer thermal energy to another object..
Equation (1) is also useful in dealing with the situation where two or more gases are confined in the same container (i.e., the same volume). Suppose, for example, that we had 0.010 mol of a gas in a 250-ml container at a temperature of 32°C. The pressure would be
Now suppose we filled the same container with 0.004 mol H2(g) at the same temperature. The pressure would be
If we put 0.006 mol N2 in the container,
Now suppose we put both the 0.004 mol H2 and the 0.006 mol N2 into the same flask together. What would the pressure be? Since the ideal gas law does not depend on which gas we have but only on the amount of any gas, the pressure of the (0.004 + 0.006) mol, or 0.010 mol, would be exactly what we got in our first calculation. But this is just the sum of the pressure that H2 would exert if it occupied the container alone plus the pressure of N2 if it were the only gas present. That is,
Ptotal = pH2 + pN2
We have just worked out an example of Dalton’s law of partial pressures (named for John Dalton, its discoverer). This law states that in a mixtureA combination of two or more substances in which the substances retain their chemical identity. of two or more gases, the total pressure is the sum of the partial pressures of all the components. The partial pressure of a gas is the pressure that gas would exert if it occupied the container by itself. Partial pressure is represented by a lowercase letter p.
TABLE 1 Vapor Pressure of Water as a Function of Temperature.
| Temperature (in °C) | Vapor Pressure/mmHg | Vapor Pressure/kPa |
| 0 | 4.6 | 0.61 |
| 5 | 6.5 | 0.87 |
| 10 | 9.2 | 1.23 |
| 15 | 12.8 | 1.71 |
| 20 | 17.5 | 2.33 |
| 25 | 23.8 | 3.17 |
| 30 | 31.8 | 4.24 |
| 50 | 92.5 | 12.33 |
| 70 | 233.7 | 31.16 |
| 75 | 289.1 | 38.63 |
| 80 | 355.1 | 47.34 |
| 85 | 433.6 | 57.81 |
| 90 | 525.8 | 70.10 |
| 95 | 633.9 | 84.51 |
| 100 | 760.0 | 101.32 |
EXAMPLE 1 Assume 0.321 g zinc metalAn element characterized by a glossy surface, high thermal and electrical conductivity, malleability, and ductility. is allowed to react with excess hydrochloric acidIn Arrhenius theory, a substance that produces hydrogen ions (hydronium ions) in aqueous solution. In Bronsted-Lowry theory, a hydrogen-ion (proton) donor. In Lewis theory, a species that accepts a pair of electrons to form a covalent bond. (an aqueousDescribing a solution in which the solvent is water. solutionA mixture of one or more substances dissolved in a solvent to give a homogeneous mixture. of HCl gas) according to the equation
Zn(s) + 2HCl(aq) → ZnCl2(aq) + H2(g)
The resulting hydrogen gas is collected over water at 25°C, while the barometric pressure is 745.4 mmHg. What volume of wet hydrogen will be collected?
Solution From Table 1 we find that at 25°C the vapor pressure of water is 23.8 mmHg. Accordingly pH2 = ptotal– pH2O = 754 mmHg – 23.8 mmHg = 721.6 mmHg. This must be converted to units compatible R:
The road map for this problem is
Thus
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