If He (g) has an average kinetic energy of 5930 J/mol under certain conditions, what is the root mean square speed of N_2 (g) molecules under the same conditions?
1 Answer
Well, what's in common? Not their degrees of freedom, but their temperature.
v_(RMS)("N"_2) = "650.7 m/s"
The average kinetic energy of
Helium is an atom, which translates in 3 dimensions with zero rotational and vibrational degrees of freedom.
Hence, according to the equipartition theorem,
<< kappa >> -= K/n = N/2RT is the average kinetic energy, where we have that
N = 3 for helium atom's linear degrees of freedom.
What temperature is it at?
T = 2/3 1/R << kappa >>
= 2/3 cdot 1/("8.314 J/mol"cdot"K") cdot "5930 J/mol"
= "475.5 K"
Now, a pitfall would be to assume that
- Rotational degrees of freedom are non-negligible at room temperature.
- Vibrational degrees of freedom are negligible for diatomic molecules at room temperature.
So, what we find is that
N = N_("trans") + N_("rot") + N_"vib" ~~ 3 + 2 because diatomic molecules rotate using two angles in spherical coordinates (
theta,phi ).
Fortunately, this does not matter because all we want is the root-mean-square speed, which depends only on molar mass and temperature.
v_(RMS) = sqrt((3RT)/M) where
M is the molar mass in"kg/mol" . Why is that necessary? Why not"g/mol" ? Well, what are the units ofR ?
color(blue)(v_(RMS)("N"_2)) = sqrt((3RT)/M)
= sqrt((3cdot"8.314 kg"cdot"m"^2"/s"^2//"mol"//"K" cdot "475.5 K")/"0.028014 kg/mol")
= color(blue)("650.7 m/s")