Molecules in a Gas
Motion of Particles in a Gas
- Molecules in a gas are in constant random motion at high speeds
- Random motion means that the molecules are travelling in no specific path and undergo sudden changes in their motion if they collide:
- With the walls of its container
- With other molecules
- The random motion of tiny particles in a fluid is known as Brownian motion
Random motion of gas molecules in a container
Pressure
- Molecules of gas in a container will collide with the container walls
- Pressure is defined as the force exerted per unit area
- Pressure is measured in the units Pascals (Pa)
- The area should always be the cross-sectional area of the object
- This means the area where the force is at right angles to it
- This equation can be rearranged with the help of a formula triangle:
Pressure, force, area formula triangle
- Imagine molecules of gas that are free to move around in a box
- The molecules in the gas move around randomly at high speeds, colliding with surfaces and exerting pressure upon them
- The temperature of a gas is related to the average speed of the molecules:
- The hotter the gas, the faster the molecules move and vice versa
- Hence, the molecules collide with the surface of the walls more frequently and with more force
- This increases the pressure
Gas molecules hit the sides of the container which creates pressure. A higher temperature increases the average speed of the molecules, increasing the pressure