S'identifier

The partial pressure of a gas is a measure of the thermodynamic activity of the gas's molecules. The pressure that a gas would create if it occupied the total volume available is called the gas's partial pressure. If two or more gases are mixed together in a container, the molecules move randomly and collide with each other, causing them to reach thermal equilibrium. When the gases have the same temperature, their molecules have the same average kinetic energy. Thus, each gas obeys the ideal gas law separately and exerts the same pressure on the walls of a container individually. Therefore, in a mixture of gases, the total pressure in the container is the sum of the partial pressures of the component gases, assuming ideal gas behavior and no chemical reactions between the components. This law is known as Dalton's law of partial pressures. The theory was established by the English scientist John Dalton (1766–1844). Dalton's law is consistent with the fact that pressures add up, according to Pascal's principle. In a mixture of ideal gases in thermal equilibrium, the number of molecules of each gas is proportional to its partial pressure.

Another important application of partial pressure is vapor pressure, which is the partial pressure of a vapor at which it is in equilibrium with the liquid phase of the same substance. At any temperature, the partial pressure of the water in the air cannot exceed the vapor pressure of the water at that temperature, as whenever the partial pressure reaches the vapor pressure, water condenses out of the air. Dew is an example of this condensation. The temperature at which condensation occurs for a sample of air is called the dew point. It is easily measured by slowly cooling a metal ball; the dew point is the temperature at which condensation first appears on the ball.

Tags
Dalton s LawPartial PressureThermodynamic ActivityGas MixtureThermal EquilibriumIdeal Gas LawKinetic EnergyTotal PressureVapor PressureCondensationDew PointJohn DaltonPascal s Principle

Du chapitre 19:

article

Now Playing

19.12 : Dalton's Law of Partial Pressure

The Kinetic Theory of Gases

1.2K Vues

article

19.1 : Équation d’état

The Kinetic Theory of Gases

1.6K Vues

article

19.2 : Équation des gaz parfaits

The Kinetic Theory of Gases

5.8K Vues

article

19.3 : Équation de Van der Waals

The Kinetic Theory of Gases

3.5K Vues

article

19.4 : Diagrammes pV

The Kinetic Theory of Gases

3.7K Vues

article

19.5 : Théorie cinétique d’un gaz parfait

The Kinetic Theory of Gases

3.0K Vues

article

19.6 : Énergie cinétique moléculaire

The Kinetic Theory of Gases

4.2K Vues

article

19.7 : Distribution des vitesses moléculaires

The Kinetic Theory of Gases

3.4K Vues

article

19.8 : Distribution de Maxwell-Boltzmann : résolution de problèmes

The Kinetic Theory of Gases

1.2K Vues

article

19.9 : Diagramme de phase

The Kinetic Theory of Gases

5.5K Vues

article

19.10 : Chemin libre moyen et Temps libre moyen

The Kinetic Theory of Gases

2.8K Vues

article

19.11 : Capacité thermique : résolution de problèmes

The Kinetic Theory of Gases

438 Vues

article

19.13 : Vitesses d’échappement des gaz

The Kinetic Theory of Gases

830 Vues

JoVE Logo

Confidentialité

Conditions d'utilisation

Politiques

Recherche

Enseignement

À PROPOS DE JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Tous droits réservés.