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Boyle's Law: Pressure-Volume Relationship

This document discusses Boyle's law, which states that the pressure and volume of a gas are inversely related at a constant temperature. The document describes an experiment using a syringe to demonstrate this relationship. When the plunger is pushed in to decrease the volume, the pressure increases, and when the plunger is pulled out to increase the volume, the pressure decreases. A table is included that shows pressure decreasing as volume increases for a gas at a constant temperature.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
111 views2 pages

Boyle's Law: Pressure-Volume Relationship

This document discusses Boyle's law, which states that the pressure and volume of a gas are inversely related at a constant temperature. The document describes an experiment using a syringe to demonstrate this relationship. When the plunger is pushed in to decrease the volume, the pressure increases, and when the plunger is pulled out to increase the volume, the pressure decreases. A table is included that shows pressure decreasing as volume increases for a gas at a constant temperature.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Name _______________________

Chemistry: The Relationship between Pressure and Volume – Boyle’s Law


Mr. Graham
March, 2007

Warm-Up: A different look at pressure……Pressure and the Guillotine

Pressure is mathematically defined using the following formula:

Pressure = force / area

Looking at the guillotine below and explain the shape of the blade as a successful method
of decapitation.

Objective: To look at the relationship between the volume of a container and the
pressure of the gas in the container.

1. Cover the hole at the syringe’s end with your finger. What happens to the
pressure of the air inside the syringe when you push the plunger down?

2. …………..when you pull the plunger up?

3. Put a marshmallow in the syringe and replace the plunger. What happens to the
volume of the marshmallow as you push the plunger down (and increase pressure
of the air inside the syringe)?
4. What happens to the volume of the marshmallow as you pull the plunger up (and
decrease the pressure of the air inside the syringe)?

5. What type of relationship (direct, inverse) exists between the volume a gas takes
up in a container and its pressure?

Back to the simulation program….you will investigate the mathematical and graphical
relationship between the volume of a container and the pressure of the gas in the
container.

Fill the container with 150 molecules of the heavy gas (carbon dioxide?).
Have temperature be your constant parameter!!!

Volume (to the Pressure Pressure x


nearest tenth of (to the volume
a nm 3) nearest (round to
tenth of two sig
an atm) figs)

What relationship exists between the volume of the container and the pressure of the gas?

What do you notice about the product of pressure and volume?

Can you write an equation for the above question?

Make a quick graph of pressure (on the y-axis) as a function of the volume (x-axis)
below.

Will the relationship between volume and pressure be the same for a light gas (helium?)?
Try it!

Homework: Read Section 12.2 + Problems 17, 21, 23 on page 390.

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