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AP Chemistry Notes

3.3.6 Gases: Motion, Spacing, and State Variables

AP Syllabus focus: ‘In gases, particles move constantly; collision frequency and spacing depend on temperature, pressure, and volume, and with minimal interparticle forces a gas has no definite shape or volume.’

Gases behave very differently from solids and liquids because their particles are far apart and in constant, rapid motion. Macroscopic properties like pressure and volume emerge from countless particle–wall collisions.

Core particulate model of a gas

Constant motion and random trajectories

Gas particles are in continuous, random motion. Between collisions, a particle travels in a straight line; collisions change its direction and speed. This motion is what allows a gas to:

  • expand to fill any container

  • flow and mix readily

  • respond quickly when conditions (state variables) change

Large spacing and minimal interparticle forces

Compared with liquids/solids, gas particles have much larger average separation. Under many conditions, attractions/repulsions between particles are small compared with their kinetic energy, so particle behavior is dominated by motion and collisions rather than sticking together.

With these minimal interparticle forces, a gas has:

  • no definite shape (it takes the shape of the container)

  • no definite volume (it expands/compresses to match the container volume)

State variables and what they mean at the particle level

Pressure

Pressure comes from particles striking container walls; each collision transfers momentum to the wall.

Pasted image

Schematic of gas particles colliding elastically with a container wall, with forces arising from momentum reversal on impact. The diagram emphasizes that pressure results from many tiny collision forces distributed over an area, consistent with P=F/AP=F/A and the kinetic-molecular model. Source

More frequent or more forceful collisions produce higher pressure.

Pressure: Force per unit area exerted on a surface by collisions of gas particles with that surface.

A useful relationship for interpreting what pressure represents is:

P=FAP=\dfrac{F}{A}

PP = pressure (Pa)

$</p><p>F=forceonthesurface(N)</p><p> = force on the surface (N)</p><p></p><p></p><p>A=areaofthesurface(m = area of the surface (m^2)</p></div><h3class="editorheading"><strong>Temperature</strong></h3><p>Temperaturetracksthe<strong>averagekineticenergy</strong>ofgasparticles.</p><imgsrc="https://tutorchaseproduction.s3.euwest2.amazonaws.com/8e526abc856140e3a0299f2c14cd9839file.png"alt="Pastedimage"style="maxwidth:100)</p></div><h3 class="editor-heading"><strong>Temperature</strong></h3><p>Temperature tracks the <strong>average kinetic energy</strong> of gas particles.</p><img src="https://tutorchase-production.s3.eu-west-2.amazonaws.com/8e526abc-8561-40e3-a029-9f2c14cd9839-file.png" alt="Pasted image" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto; cursor: pointer; width: 646px;" draggable="true"><p><em>Maxwell–Boltzmann speed distribution curves comparing different gases at the same temperature, showing how molecular mass affects the most probable speed and the overall shape of the distribution. This reinforces that temperature sets the average translational kinetic energy, while individual molecules span a range of speeds. </em><a target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer nofollow" href="https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:MaxwellBoltzmann-en.svg"><em>Source</em></a></p><img src="https://tutorchase-production.s3.eu-west-2.amazonaws.com/e4ba04ed-bdb8-4de3-a2d8-96b4e20efdd3-file.png" alt="Pasted image" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto; cursor: pointer;" draggable="true"><p><em>Maxwell–Boltzmann speed distributions for the same gas at two temperatures (T_2 > T_1).Thehighertemperaturecurveisbroaderandshiftedtolargerspeeds,illustratingthatincreasing). The higher-temperature curve is broader and shifted to larger speeds, illustrating that increasing Tincreasestypicalmolecularspeeds(andthereforeaveragetranslationalkineticenergy).</em><atarget="blank"rel="noopenernoreferrernofollow"href="https://openstax.org/books/universityphysicsvolume2/pages/24distributionofmolecularspeeds"><em>Source</em></a></p><p>Increasingtemperatureincreasestypicalparticlespeeds,socollisionsbecomemoreenergeticandoftenmorefrequent.</p><divclass="takeawayssection"><p><strong>Temperature</strong>:Ameasureproportionaltotheaveragekineticenergyofparticlesinasample.</p></div><h3class="editorheading"><strong>Volume</strong></h3><p>Volumeisthespaceavailableforparticlemotion.Changingvolumedirectlychangeshowoftenparticlesreachthewalls.</p><divclass="takeawayssection"><p><strong>Volume(gas)</strong>:Thevolumeofthecontainerthatthegasoccupies,settingtheavailablespaceforparticlemotion.</p></div><h2class="editorheading"id="howcollisionfrequencyandspacingdependontpandv"><strong>Howcollisionfrequencyandspacingdependon increases typical molecular speeds (and therefore average translational kinetic energy). </em><a target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer nofollow" href="https://openstax.org/books/university-physics-volume-2/pages/2-4-distribution-of-molecular-speeds"><em>Source</em></a></p><p>Increasing temperature increases typical particle speeds, so collisions become more energetic and often more frequent.</p><div class="takeaways-section"><p><strong>Temperature</strong>: A measure proportional to the average kinetic energy of particles in a sample.</p></div><h3 class="editor-heading"><strong>Volume</strong></h3><p>Volume is the space available for particle motion. Changing volume directly changes how often particles reach the walls.</p><div class="takeaways-section"><p><strong>Volume (gas)</strong>: The volume of the container that the gas occupies, setting the available space for particle motion.</p></div><h2 class="editor-heading" id="how-collision-frequency-and-spacing-depend-on-t-p-and-v"><strong>How collision frequency and spacing depend on T,, P,and, and V$

Changing temperature (holding other factors fixed)

If temperature increases:

  • particle speeds increase

  • collisions with container walls become more forceful

  • at constant volume, wall-collision rate tends to increase, so measured pressure increases

If temperature decreases, the reverse trends occur; sufficiently low temperatures increase the importance of attractions and can promote condensation (conceptually consistent with “minimal interparticle forces” failing under those conditions).

Changing volume (constant amount of gas)

If volume increases:

  • particle spacing increases

  • particles take longer, on average, to reach the walls

  • collision frequency with the walls decreases, so pressure decreases

If volume decreases:

  • particles are closer together and to the walls

  • wall collisions become more frequent, raising pressure

  • interparticle collisions also become more frequent (even if forces remain small)

Changing pressure (what it implies microscopically)

Higher pressure typically corresponds to conditions where:

  • particles are closer together (smaller volume for a fixed amount of gas)

  • wall-collision frequency is higher

  • gases are more easily compressed because empty space is reduced, not because particles themselves shrink

Key macroscopic consequences of the particulate picture

No definite shape or volume

Because particles move freely and are widely spaced, a gas:

  • adopts container shape (particles reach all regions)

  • fills container volume (particles spread out until constrained)

Compressibility

Gases are highly compressible because most of the gas volume is empty space between particles. Compression primarily reduces spacing, increasing collision frequency and pressure.

FAQ

Mean free path is the average distance a particle travels between collisions.

It increases when the gas is less crowded (lower number density) and decreases when particles are closer together (higher pressure or smaller volume).

A sensor detects a macroscopic force produced by an enormous number of microscopic impacts.

Each collision transfers momentum; the combined effect over time produces a steady force on the sensor surface.

In classical terms, they always have motion at any temperature above absolute zero.

As temperature falls, average kinetic energy drops, collisions become less energetic, and gases become more likely to condense.

Random motion causes particles to spread from regions of higher concentration to lower concentration.

This redistribution continues until the mixture is uniform throughout the available volume.

Pressure rises essentially immediately because wall collisions become more frequent as spacing decreases.

Temperature may also rise if compression is fast enough to limit heat transfer to the surroundings.

Practice Questions

Explain, in terms of particle motion and spacing, why a gas has no definite shape and no definite volume.

  • Particles are far apart with lots of empty space / large spacing (1)

  • Particles move constantly and randomly, so they spread to fill the container and take its shape/volume (1)

A sample of gas is in a sealed rigid container. Describe what happens to (i) collision frequency with the walls and (ii) pressure when the temperature is increased. Then describe what happens to collision frequency with the walls and pressure if the container volume is increased at constant temperature (amount of gas unchanged).

  • Increasing temperature increases average particle speed / kinetic energy (1)

  • Wall collisions become more frequent and/or more forceful (1)

  • Pressure increases due to increased momentum transfer to the walls (1)

  • Increasing volume increases particle spacing / distance to walls (1)

  • Wall-collision frequency decreases, so pressure decreases (1)

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