Chapter 9 Gases
9.6 Effusion and Diffusion of Gases
Learning Objectives
By the end of this section, you will be able to:
- Define and explain effusion and diffusion
- State Graham’s law and use it to compute relevant gas properties
If you have ever been in a room when a piping hot pizza was delivered, you have been made aware of the fact that gaseous molecules can quickly spread throughout a room, as evidenced by the pleasant aroma that soon reaches your nose. Although gaseous molecules travel at tremendous speeds (hundreds of meters per second), they collide with other gaseous molecules and travel in many different directions before reaching the desired target. At room temperature, a gaseous molecule will experience billions of collisions per second. The mean free path is the average distance a molecule travels between collisions. The mean free path increases with decreasing pressure; in general, the mean free path for a gaseous molecule will be hundreds of times the diameter of the molecule
In general, we know that when a sample of gas is introduced to one part of a closed container, its molecules very quickly disperse throughout the container; this process by which molecules disperse in space in response to differences in concentration is called diffusion (shown in Figure 9.29). The gaseous atoms or molecules are, of course, unaware of any concentration gradient, they simply move randomly—regions of higher concentration have more particles than regions of lower concentrations, and so a net movement of species from high to low concentration areas takes place. In a closed environment, diffusion will ultimately result in equal concentrations of gas throughout, as depicted in Figure 9.29(c). The gaseous atoms and molecules continue to move, but since their concentrations are the same in both bulbs, the rates of transfer between the bulbs are equal (no net transfer of molecules occurs).
We are often interested in the rate of diffusion, the amount of gas passing through some area per unit time:
The diffusion rate depends on several factors:
- temperature
- the mass of the atoms or molecules
- the concentration gradient (the increase or decrease in concentration from one point to another)
- the amount of surface area available for diffusion
- the distance the gas particles must travel.
Note also that the time required for diffusion to occur is inversely proportional to the rate of diffusion, as shown in the rate of diffusion equation.
A process involving movement of gaseous species similar to diffusion is effusion, the escape of gas molecules through a tiny hole (such as a pinhole in a balloon) into a vacuum (Figure 9.30). Although diffusion and effusion rates both depend on the molar mass of the gas involved, their rates are not equal; however, the ratios of their rates are the same.
If a mixture of gases is placed in a container with porous walls, the gases effuse through the small openings in the walls. The lighter gases pass through the small openings more rapidly (at a higher rate) than the heavier ones (Figure 9.31). In 1832, Thomas Graham studied the rates of effusion of different gases and formulated Graham’s law of effusion: The rate of effusion of a gas is inversely proportional to the square root of the mass of its particles:
This means that if two gases A and B are at the same temperature and pressure, the ratio of their effusion rates is inversely proportional to the ratio of the square roots of the masses of their particles:
Example 9.20 – Applying Graham’s Law to Rates of Effusion
Calculate the ratio of the rate of effusion of hydrogen to the rate of effusion of oxygen.
Solution
From Graham’s law, we have:
Hydrogen effuses four times as rapidly as oxygen.
Check Your Learning
Click here to see a walkthrough for this problem!
To answer this question, use Graham’s law of effusion:
[latex]\frac {rate \; of \; effusion \; of \; SO_2}{rate \; of \; effusion \; of \; N_2} =\frac {\sqrt {M_{N_2}}}{\sqrt {M_{SO_2}}}[/latex]
Solving for the rate of effusion of SO2, we get
[latex]rate \; of \; effusion \; of \; SO_2 = rate \; of \; effusion \; of \; N_2 \times \frac {\sqrt {M_{N_2}}}{\sqrt {M_{SO_2}}}[/latex]
[latex]= 79 \: \frac{mL}{s} \times \frac{\sqrt{28.02 \: g/mol}}{\sqrt{64.07 \: g/mol}} = 52 \: \frac{mL}{s}[/latex]
Example 9.21 – Effusion Time Calculations
It takes 243 s for 4.46 × 10−5 mol Xe to effuse through a tiny hole. Under the same conditions, how long will it take 4.46 × 10−5 mol Ne to effuse?
Solution
It is important to resist the temptation to use the times directly, and to remember how rate relates to time as well as how it relates to mass. Recall the definition of rate of effusion:
and combine it with Graham’s law:
to get:
[latex]\frac {\frac {amount \; of \; Xe \; transferred}{time \; for \; Xe}}{\frac {amount \; of \; Ne \; transferred}{time \; for \; Ne}} = \frac {\sqrt {M_{Ne}}}{\sqrt {M_{Xe}}}[/latex]
Noting that amount of Xe = amount of Ne, and solving for time for Ne:
and substitute values:
Finally, solve for the desired quantity:
[latex]time \; for \; Ne = 0.392 \, (243 \: s) = 95.3 \: s[/latex]
Note that this answer is reasonable: since Ne is lighter than Xe, the effusion rate for Ne will be larger than that for Xe, which means the time of effusion for Ne will be smaller than that for Xe.
Check Your Learning
A party balloon filled with helium deflates to 2/3 of its original volume in 8.0 hours. How long will it take an identical balloon filled with the same number of moles of air (M = 28.2 g/mol) to deflate to 1/2 of its original volume?
Click here for the solution!
32 hours
As above, we use Graham’s law and the definition of the rate of effusion:
[latex]\frac {rate \; of \; effusion \; of \; He}{rate \; of \; effusion \; of \; air} = \frac {\frac {amount \; of \; He \; transferred}{time \; for \; He}}{\frac {amount \; of \; air \; transferred}{time \; for \; air}} = \frac {\sqrt {M_{air}}}{\sqrt {M_{He}}}[/latex]
We can rearrange this expression to solve for the amount of time required for air to escape:
[latex]time \; for \; air = time \; for \; He \times \frac{amount \; of \; air}{amount \; of \; He} \times \frac {\sqrt {M_{air}}}{\sqrt {M_{He}}}[/latex]
Finally, we can solve for the time it takes for air to deflate to 1/2 its original volume:
[latex]time \; for \; air = 8.0 \; hours \times \frac{1/2}{1/3} \times \frac {\sqrt {28.2 \; g/mol}}{\sqrt {4.00 \; g/mol}} = 32 \; hours[/latex]
Note that, since the helium balloon is 2/3 of its original volume after 8 hours, 1/3 of the original volume effused during that 8 hours.
Example 9.22 – Determining Molar Mass Using Graham’s Law
An unknown gas effuses 1.66 times more rapidly than CO2. What is the molar mass of the unknown gas? Can you make a reasonable guess as to its identity?
Solution
From Graham’s law, we have:
Plug in known data:
[latex]\frac {1.66}{1} = \frac {\sqrt {44.0 \: g/mol}}{\sqrt {M_{unknown}}} = \sqrt {\frac {44.0 \: g/mol}{M_{unknown}}}[/latex]
Solve:
The gas could be CH4, the only gas with this molar mass.
Check Your Learning
How Sciences Interconnect
Use of Diffusion for Nuclear Energy Applications: Uranium Enrichment
Gaseous diffusion has been used to produce enriched uranium for use in nuclear power plants and weapons. Naturally occurring uranium contains only 0.72% of 235U, the kind of uranium that is “fissile,” that is, capable of sustaining a nuclear fission chain reaction. Nuclear reactors require fuel that is 2–5% 235U, and nuclear bombs need even higher concentrations. One way to enrich uranium to the desired levels is to take advantage of Graham’s law. In a gaseous diffusion enrichment plant, uranium hexafluoride (UF6, the only uranium compound that is volatile enough to work) is slowly pumped through large cylindrical vessels called diffusers, which contain porous barriers with microscopic openings. The process is one of diffusion because the other side of the barrier is not evacuated. The 235UF6 molecules have a higher average speed and diffuse through the barrier a little faster than the heavier 238UF6 molecules. The gas that has passed through the barrier is slightly enriched in 235UF6 and the residual gas is slightly depleted. The small difference in molecular weights between 235UF6 and 238UF6 means that only about 0.4% enrichment is achieved in one diffuser (Figure 9.32). But by connecting many diffusers in a sequence of stages (called a cascade), the desired level of enrichment can be attained.
The large scale separation of gaseous 235UF6 from 238UF6 was first done during the World War II, at the atomic energy installation in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, as part of the Manhattan Project (the development of the first atomic bomb). Although the theory is simple, separation required surmounting many daunting technical challenges to make it work in practice. The barrier must have tiny, uniform holes (about 10–6 cm in diameter) and be porous enough to produce high flow rates. All materials (the barrier, tubing, surface coatings, lubricants, and gaskets) need to be able to contain, but not react with, the highly reactive and corrosive UF6.
Because gaseous diffusion plants require very large amounts of energy (to compress the gas to the high pressures required and drive it through the diffuser cascade, to remove the heat produced during compression, and so on), it is now being replaced by gas centrifuge technology, which requires far less energy. A current hot political issue is how to deny this technology to Iran, to prevent it from producing enough enriched uranium for them to use to make nuclear weapons.