States of Matter: Gases and Liquids | JEE Chemistry Notes

States of Matter: Gases and Liquids

1. Introduction to States of Matter

Matter exists in three common physical states: solid, liquid, and gas. The difference between these states arises due to variation in:
  • Intermolecular forces
  • Intermolecular distances
  • Kinetic energy of particles

2. Gaseous State – Characteristics

Gases have:
  • No fixed shape
  • No fixed volume
  • High compressibility
  • Negligible intermolecular forces

3. Gas Laws

(a) Boyle’s Law

At constant temperature, pressure is inversely proportional to volume.
$P \propto \frac{1}{V} \quad \Rightarrow \quad PV = \text{constant}$

(b) Charles’ Law

At constant pressure, volume is directly proportional to absolute temperature.
$\frac{V}{T} = \text{constant}$

(c) Gay-Lussac’s Law

$\frac{P}{T} = \text{constant}$

(d) Avogadro’s Law

$V \propto n \quad \Rightarrow \quad \frac{V}{n} = \text{constant}$

4. Ideal Gas Equation

$PV = nRT$
Symbol Meaning
$P$Pressure
$V$Volume
$n$Number of moles
$R$Gas constant
$T$Temperature (K)

5. Kinetic Theory of Gases

According to kinetic theory:
  • Gas particles are in continuous random motion
  • Collisions are perfectly elastic
  • Average kinetic energy depends only on temperature
$\text{Average kinetic energy} = \frac{3}{2}kT$

6. Root Mean Square (RMS) Speed

$u_{rms} = \sqrt{\frac{3RT}{M}}$
Lighter gases move faster than heavier gases at the same temperature.

7. Real Gases

Real gases deviate from ideal behavior due to:
  • Finite molecular volume
  • Intermolecular attractions

8. van der Waals Equation

$\left(P + \frac{a n^2}{V^2}\right)(V - nb) = nRT$
$a$ accounts for intermolecular attraction $b$ accounts for molecular volume

9. Critical Temperature, Pressure, and Volume

  • Critical Temperature: Above this, gas cannot be liquefied
  • Critical Pressure: Minimum pressure required to liquefy gas
  • Critical Volume: Volume at critical point

10. Liquefaction of Gases

Gases can be liquefied by:
  • Lowering temperature
  • Increasing pressure

11. Liquid State – Characteristics

Liquids have:
  • Fixed volume
  • No fixed shape
  • Moderate intermolecular forces

12. Vapour Pressure

Vapour pressure is the pressure exerted by vapour in equilibrium with its liquid.
Higher vapour pressure → higher volatility

13. Surface Tension

$\text{Surface tension} = \frac{\text{Force}}{\text{Length}}$

14. Viscosity

Viscosity is resistance to flow of liquid.
Viscosity decreases with increase in temperature.

15. Capillary Action

$h = \frac{2T \cos \theta}{r d g}$

16. Differences Between Gases and Liquids

Property Gas Liquid
VolumeNot fixedFixed
CompressibilityHighLow
Intermolecular forceVery weakModerate

17. Important Exam Points

  • Always convert temperature to Kelvin
  • Use van der Waals equation for real gases
  • Remember critical constants
  • Viscosity decreases with temperature in liquids

18. Summary

This chapter explains the behavior of gases and liquids using:
  • Gas laws
  • Kinetic theory
  • Real gas corrections
  • Properties of liquids
A strong understanding of this chapter is essential for physical chemistry.
Scroll to Top
0

Subtotal