Problem 2
Question
In this experiment a student found that when she increased the temperature of a \(550 \mathrm{mL}\) sample of air from \(22.3^{\circ} \mathrm{C}\) to \(29.7^{\circ} \mathrm{C},\) the pressure of the air went from \(1009 \mathrm{cm} \mathrm{H}_{2} \mathrm{O}\) up to \(1033 \mathrm{cm} \mathrm{H}_{2} \mathrm{O}\). Since the air expands linearly with temperature, the equation relating \(P\) to \(t\) is of the form: $$P=m t+b$$ a. What is the slope of the line? (Find the change in \(P\) divided by the change in \(t\).) \(m=\)_____ \(\mathrm{cm} \mathrm{H}_{2} \mathrm{O} /^{\circ} \mathrm{C}\) b. Find the value of \(b .\) (Substitute known values of \(P\) and \(t\) into Equation 9 and solve for \(b\).)\(b=\)_____ c. Express Equation 9 in terms of the values of \(m\) and \(b\). \(P=\) d. At what temperature \(t\) will \(P\) become zero? \(P=0 \quad\) at \(\quad t=\)_____ \(^{\circ} \mathrm{C}=t_{\mathrm{o}}=-A\) e. The temperature in Part d is the absolute zero of temperature. Lord Kelvin suggested that we set up a scale on which that temperature is 0 K. On that scale, \(T=t+A\). Show that, on the Kelvin scale, your equation reduces to \(P=m T\).
Step-by-Step Solution
VerifiedKey Concepts
Pressure-Temperature Relationship
Here's how it works:
- The initial pressure, \( P_1 = 1009 \) cm H extsubscript{2}O, corresponds to the initial temperature, \( t_1 = 22.3^{ ext{o}} ext{C} \).
- As the temperature increases to \( t_2 = 29.7^{ ext{o}} ext{C} \), the pressure rises to \( P_2 = 1033 \text{ cm H}_2 ext{O} \).
Absolute Zero
Steps involved in calculating absolute zero:
- The equation derived from the pressure-temperature relationship is \( P = mt + b \).
- For \( P = 0 \), solve for temperature \( t \) using \( 0 = mt + b \), leading to \( t = -\frac{b}{m} \).
To adopt this in the Kelvin scale:
- Absolute zero in Celsius (°C) is approximately -273.15°C.
- On the Kelvin scale, this corresponds to 0 K.
Linear Expansion of Gases
Key points about linear expansion of gases:
- In a sealed container where volume cannot change, increasing temperature forces pressure to increase instead.
- The experiment provided values support the linear relationship via the equation \( P = mt + b \).
- The known values of temperature and pressure can be used to derive the slope \( m \) of this line, showing how much pressure changes per unit temperature increase.