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B2. This Question Is in Two Parts. Part 1 Is About Gas Expansion and Part 2 Is About Children On A Bicycle. Part 1. Gas Expansion

This document is a multi-part question about gas expansion and children on bicycles. It includes a diagram of a cylinder with a piston containing gas molecules before and after expansion. It asks the student to: 1) Explain how pressure arises on the piston face from molecular motions and why gravity does not cause molecules to accumulate at the bottom. 2) Describe how the average kinetic energy and pressure of the gas molecules compares before and after expansion when the volume doubles. 3) Calculate the new pressure value if the original pressure was 300 kPa. 4) Determine the temperature required to return the pressure to the original 300 kPa value if the volume remains fixed after expansion.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
101 views2 pages

B2. This Question Is in Two Parts. Part 1 Is About Gas Expansion and Part 2 Is About Children On A Bicycle. Part 1. Gas Expansion

This document is a multi-part question about gas expansion and children on bicycles. It includes a diagram of a cylinder with a piston containing gas molecules before and after expansion. It asks the student to: 1) Explain how pressure arises on the piston face from molecular motions and why gravity does not cause molecules to accumulate at the bottom. 2) Describe how the average kinetic energy and pressure of the gas molecules compares before and after expansion when the volume doubles. 3) Calculate the new pressure value if the original pressure was 300 kPa. 4) Determine the temperature required to return the pressure to the original 300 kPa value if the volume remains fixed after expansion.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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– 12 – M01/430/S(2)

B2. This question is in two parts. Part 1 is about gas expansion and Part 2 is about children on a bicycle.
Answer both parts in this question.

Part 1. Gas expansion

A quantity of gas is enclosed in a metal cylinder fitted with a piston. There are very many gas
molecules, but they are represented in the diagram by the ten molecules shown, with velocities
indicated. The cylinder walls are thermally conducting.

(a) Explain in terms of molecular motions how pressure arises on the face of the piston. [2]

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(b) If gravity acts on the molecules, why do they not all fall down and accumulate stationary at
the lower surface? Explain. [2]

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(This question continues on the following page)

221-180
– 13 – M01/430/S(2)

(Question B2 Part 1 continued)


Suppose the piston is moved outwards, with sufficient time allowed so that the gas temperature is the
same afterwards. The diagram below shows the piston position where the gas volume has doubled.

(c) How does the average kinetic energy of the gas molecules compare before and after this
expansion? Explain. [2]
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(d) Draw in ten representative gas molecules on the diagram above, including representative
velocity vectors, to illustrate the situation after expansion. Explain your diagram briefly. [2]
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(e) Explain, in terms of molecular motion and the diagrams above, why the pressure exerted by
the gas on the piston is less in the expanded situation you have drawn. [2]

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(f) If the gas pressure was 300 kPa before expansion, calculate the pressure after expansion,
when the volume has doubled. [2]

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(g) Suppose one wishes to bring the pressure back to the original 300 kPa by increasing the
temperature of the gas (at the fixed new volume). If the current temperature is 20 ! C , what
new temperature is required? [3]
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(This question continues on the following page)

221-180 Turn over

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