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Temperature Vs. Volume of a Gas

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Temperature Vs. Volume of a Gas

Title:

Temperature vs. Volume of a Gas

Purpose:

To determine what happens to the volume of a gas sample as the temperature doubles.

Materials:

1 Beral thin-stem pipette, hot plate, 2 beakers of water, CBL temperature probe

Procedure:

1. Take a large beaker of room temperature water and record its temperature.

2. Determine the volume of the beral pipette by completely filling it with water and then holding it in a vertical position to squeeze out and count the number of drops of water it holds. At room temperature, the “empty” pipette contains air which occupies a volume that can be expressed as the number of drops observed and recorded. DO NOT squeeze the pipette again unless you are counting drops.

3. Place a small beaker of water on a heat source and increase the temperature of the water approximately 8° C. Remove the beaker from the heat source and allow the temperature to stabilize.

4. Place the empty pipette bulb into the hot water and agitate the pipette to increase the contact between the pipette bulb and the water molecules. After two minutes, flip the pipette and immediately submerge the tip into the large beaker of room temperature water. DO NOT squeeze the pipette. Record the temperature of the heated water at the time you removed the pipette.

5. Observe the water moving into the pipette until water movement ceases. Hold the pipette vertically and squeeze to count the additional drops of water now in the pipette. Added to the initial pipette volume, this will be the total gas volume at the new temperature.

6. Repeat steps 3-5 to obtain additional data points. Do not heat above 70° C.

Data Table:

Initial Volume of pipette (drops) = 137

Linear Regression:

Graph:

Questions:

1. What temperature scale is used when working with changes in gas volumes as conditions such as temperature or pressure vary?

The

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