ChemSiddiqui Posted March 11, 2009 Posted March 11, 2009 hi, i just wanted to confirm that in the formula that relates KE with root mean square speed; KE= 1/2 mc^2 m is the mass of something rather than the molar mass? Say we have He(helium) which has the molar mass of 0.004 Kg/mol while its mass,m, is 4!. Slightly confused because in the root mean square speed formula I use the molar mass, M. c = (3RT/M)^1/2 thanx in advance for any help!
swansont Posted March 11, 2009 Posted March 11, 2009 [Cue Obi-Wan voice] Follow the units, Luke [/Obi] If you used molar mass, you'd get kinetic energy per mole. But as you demonstrate, some thermodynamics equations are normalized in that way — they use the gas constant constant ® rather than the Boltzmann constant (k), and R has units of J/K-mol (unlike k, which has units of J/K)
ChemSiddiqui Posted March 12, 2009 Author Posted March 12, 2009 right ok, now here's an other question. calculated the KE of He and SF6 from the equations from my last post at 500K and I get the same value for both. I am confused. SF6 is bigger and heavier molecule so must have a smaller value for rms speed which it has but why the same kinetic energy? I get 1.033 x 10^-20 in both cases. What is wrong here...am I on the right track?!
swansont Posted March 12, 2009 Posted March 12, 2009 right ok, now here's an other question. calculated the KE of He and SF6 from the equations from my last post at 500K and I get the same value for both. I am confused. SF6 is bigger and heavier molecule so must have a smaller value for rms speed which it has but why the same kinetic energy? I get 1.033 x 10^-20 in both cases. What is wrong here...am I on the right track?! They will have the same average kinetic energy at the same temperature — that's exactly what temperature tells you. Larger mass means slower speed, but mv^2 will be the same. 1
ChemSiddiqui Posted March 12, 2009 Author Posted March 12, 2009 Thnx swansont for your help. rep on the way!
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