Experiment
5 Stoichiometry : Gases Determining the Ideal Gas Constant |
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Lab Owl Announcement:
Upon completion of this lab log onto OWL. Your fourth Lab Owl assignment, Lab Owl: Exp 5, should appear there. You have until the next scheduled laboratory to complete this assignment. This is your final assignment.. Remember, these Lab Owls are worth 25% of your laboratory grade. Introduction:Gases When dealing with gases in chemical reactions we cannot weigh them or dispense them as easily as we can with solids and solutions. However there is a relationship between the four quantities needed to describe a gas:
2. Temperature of the gas. 3. Volume occupied by the gas. 4. Pressure exerted by the gas. 2Al(s) + 2NaOH(aq) + 6H2O(l) = 2NaAl(OH)4(aq) + 3H2(g)
2. Volume of H2 in liters 3. The number of moles of H2 produced 4. The temperature in K Determining the Ideal Gas Constant: While this experiment is simple in its design, we do have one problem to address: how to determine the pressure exerted by the H2(g). By adjusting the level of water in the Florence flask to match that in the buret, we are ensuring that the pressure inside the buret is equal to atmospheric pressure. The problem is that H2(g) is not the only gas that has been trapped inside the buret! In setting up the experiment you have to invert the
buret and adjust the level of water so that you may read the volume in
the buret! Thus we have air in our system. The H2 gas is collected
over water, and water has a vapor pressure and thus we have some gaseous
water in there as well. How do we overcome this? Here is where we turn
to Dalton's Law of Partial Pressures, in which the total pressure exerted
by a mixture of gases is equal to the sum of the pressures exerted by the individual
components.
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Experimental Procedure: Before coming to the
laboratory "You are expected to plot a graph of P vs T in order to determine the Vapor Pressure of water at the temperature that you performed the experiment. Even in the unlikely event that that temperature is in fact listed!! Vapor
Pressure of Water as a Function of Temperature
Determining the Ideal Gas Constant. Before you begin this experiment you may wish to practice inverting a buret full of distilled water into your Florence flask. It would also be worthwhile to get used to taking volume readings with the buret inverted! 1 Cut a piece of aluminum ~0.025g. Weigh and record its exact mass. Try and keep the mass as close to this size as possible. 2 Fill your buret with 1M NaOH almost to the top ignoring the graduations for the moment. 3 Place ~ 3/4" of distilled water into a Florence Flask. 4 Fold the Aluminum loosely so that it fits into the base of the buret. Do not fold it too tightly as this drastically reduces the surface area exposed to the base and will dramatically increase the total reaction time. Insert the foil into the buret. You have approximately one minute to do step 5. 5 Carefully invert the buret so that the base lies at the bottom of the flask. Use your buret stand to clamp it vertically. If the level of the water is below the first graduation then just record the initial volume. Remember the buret is upside down! If the level of the NaOH inside the buret is above the first graduation, open the stopcock briefly and let the level fall until it is below the graduation. 6 In the first few minutes keep an eye on the gas evolution to make sure that it is not escaping beneath the buret. After a minute or so the Aluminum will float to the top. 7 When gas evolution has ceased, adjust the level of water in the Florence flask so that it is at the same level as the water in the buret. Now record the final volume. 8 Don't forget to record the pressure and temperature. Your TA will record the day's barometric pressure on the board. 9 Determine the
number of moles of H2(g) produced and the Ideal Gas Constant.
How does this value compare with the accepted value of 0.08205 L.atm.mol-1.K-1?
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