Ideal Gas Law: Modeling Energy at Macroscopic and Molecular Scales

Estimated Time: 45-60 minutes Materials: Computer or tablet with internet access, calculator.


Part 1: Engage (Anchoring Phenomenon)

A hot air balloon rises because the air inside is heated. The burner heats the air inside the balloon envelope, causing it to expand and the balloon to lift off the ground. But why does heating the air make the balloon float?

  1. Observations and Questions:
    • Why does heating the air inside a balloon cause it to rise?
    • Generate at least two “need to know” questions about how temperature, volume, and moles of gas affect pressure and buoyancy.

Part 2: Explore (Simulation Investigation)

Open the Ideal Gas Law simulation.

Simulation Features: 3 independent sliders (Volume, Temperature, Moles), real-time Pressure dashboard, particle animation with piston, P-V and P-T graphs, observation log.

  1. Data Collection:

Part A: Temperature Experiments

Part B: Volume Experiments

Part C: Moles Experiments

Data Table 1: Pressure vs. Temperature (V = 10 L, n = 1.0 mol) | Trial | Temperature (K) | Pressure (atm) | P/T | |:—|:—|:—|:—| | 1 | 300 | | | | 2 | 400 | | | | 3 | 500 | | | | 4 | 600 | | |

Data Table 2: Pressure vs. Volume (T = 400 K, n = 1.0 mol) | Trial | Volume (L) | Pressure (atm) | P × V | |:—|:—|:—|:—| | 1 | 10 | | | | 2 | 8 | | | | 3 | 6 | | | | 4 | 4 | | |

Data Table 3: Pressure vs. Moles (V = 10 L, T = 400 K) | Trial | Moles (mol) | Pressure (atm) | P/n | |:—|:—|:—|:—| | 1 | 1.0 | | | | 2 | 2.0 | | | | 3 | 3.0 | | |


Part 3: Explain (Sensemaking)

The Ideal Gas Law states that for an ideal gas: \(PV = nRT\)

  1. Analyzing the Pressure Relationships:
    • Calculate P/T for each trial in Data Table 1. What do you notice? What does this tell you about the relationship between pressure and temperature?
    • Calculate P × V for each trial in Data Table 2. What pattern do you observe? Describe the mathematical relationship between pressure and volume.
    • Calculate P/n for each trial in Data Table 3. What does this reveal about pressure and the amount of gas?
  2. Connecting Macroscopic to Microscopic (Energy at Two Scales):
    • Use the particle animation to explain WHY increasing temperature increases pressure. Describe what happens to particle speed, collision frequency, and collision force when you add thermal energy.
    • When you decrease the volume, the piston compresses the gas. Describe how this affects particle motion and spacing. Where does the energy from the work done by the piston go at the particle level? Connect to conservation of energy.
    • In your own words, explain how the Ideal Gas Law ($PV = nRT$) accounts for energy at both the macroscopic scale (pressure and volume) and the molecular scale (temperature as average KE of particles).

Part 4: Elaborate / Evaluate (Argumentation & Modeling)

  1. Developing a Multi-Scale Model of the Hot Air Balloon:

Create a model (diagram with written explanation) that explains how a hot air balloon rises, using evidence from your simulation investigation. Your model must include:


Teacher Notes & NGSS Alignment

Performance Expectation: HS-PS3-2. Develop and use models to illustrate that energy at the macroscopic scale can be accounted for as a combination of energy associated with the motion of particles (objects) and energy associated with the relative positions of particles (objects).

Alignment to Dimensions:

Evidence Statement Mapping: