This is caused when gas particles collide with the sides of its container.
What is pressure?
Kinetic refers to this.
What is motion?
The equation for the ideal gas law.
What is PV = nRT?
This law relates pressure and volume.
What is Boyle's law?
Standard temperature and pressure.
What is 273 K and 1 atm?
This is a measure of average kinetic energy.
What is temperature?
Collisions between gas particles are considered to be this.
What is elastic?
These are not felt by an ideal gas.
What are intermolecular forces?
The temperature scale required to solve gas law problems.
What is Kelvin?
The volume occupied by 1 mol of any gas at STP.
What is 22.4 L?
Measured when talking about compressibility, this property of a gas can change due to all of the empty space between gas particles.
What is volume?
The two main factors that contribute to a gas particle's kinetic energy.
What is mass and velocity (speed)?
These are the conditions at which a gas behaves most ideally.
What is a high temperature and low pressure?
This law holds volume (V) and amount (n) constant.
What is Gay-Lussac's law?
This is NOT the same for 1 mol of any sample of gas at STP.
What is mass (amount in grams) or density (mass divided by volume)?
Gases completely fill and take on the shape of this.
What is the container?
When one substance spreads out through another substance.
What is diffusion?
The number and units of the ideal gas constant R.
What is 0.0821 atm L / mol K?
The variables involved in Charles' law.
What are volume (V) and temperature (T)?
Liters of NH3 produced when 1 mol of N2 reacts at STP: 1 N2 + 3 H2 --> 2 NH3.
What is 44.8 L?
How many pounds a square inch column of gas would weigh on earth.
What is 14.7?
A law relating the rate of effusion to the inverse of the square root of the molar mass of the gas.
What is Graham's law?
The volume of an ideal gas molecule.
What is negligible (zero)?
This law relates pressure, volume, and temperature.
What is the combined gas law?
Liters of NH3 produced when 6 L of H2 reacts at STP: 1 N2 + 3 H2 --> 2 NH3.
What is 4 L?