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Page 1: Law and Chaos (1640-1665)

Law and ChaosLaw and Chaos(1640-1665)(1640-1665)

CM1100 CM1100

History of Chemistry: History of Chemistry: Gases and the Gas Laws Gases and the Gas Laws

Page 2: Law and Chaos (1640-1665)

Ancient BeliefsAncient Beliefs• Matter made up of 4 ELEMENTS:

Air, Earth, Water, Fire.• 4 Qualities: Hot, Cold, Moist, Dry• Nature abhors a vacuum Aristotle

Page 3: Law and Chaos (1640-1665)

Galileo’s Laboratory (1638-43)Galileo’s Laboratory (1638-43)• Galileo had questioned why a suction pump could only

raise water in a mine by about 9-10 metres.• Torricelli, his secretary, proposed an experiment

performed by Viviani in 1643 (after Galileo was dead) to prove that the effect was caused by atmospheric pressure.

• Nature does not abhor a vacuum!

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Weight of the AtmosphereWeight of the Atmosphere• Viviani took a 2.5m long glass tube and filled it

with mercury and inverted it into a bowl of mercury.

• Mercury is 13.6 times denser than water and the mercury column rose to about 76 cm.

• A vacuum was created at the top of the tube

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The BarometerThe Barometer ((GkGk “baros” for weight; “metron” for measure) “baros” for weight; “metron” for measure)

• The column of mercury rose and fell depending on the weather

• The weight of the column of mercury was equal to the weight of the air

• The type of experiment had been performed with water some years before in Rome

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Pascal and PPascal and Péérier (1648)rier (1648)• Torricelli wrote a letter

explaining his findings on atmospheric weight. It eventually reached Blaise Pascal in France.

• He instructed Florent Périer, his brother in law, to make measurements with a mercury barometer at the bottom and top of Puy de Dome (an extinct volcano, 1.5m high) in the Massif Central

• The experiment showed that the pressure of the atmosphere decreased with height.

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van Helmont (1579-1644) van Helmont (1579-1644) [yet another famous [yet another famous

Belgian!]Belgian!]

• He believed that Air was the basis of all matter

• He coined the word GAS (Gk “khaos” for empty space) as the product of some chemical reactions e.g charcoal burning

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Gas Sylvestre Gas Sylvestre (Gas from Wood)(Gas from Wood)

• We know this gas today as CARBON DIOXIDE.• van Helmont’s work (published after his death in

1648) indicated that it was produced not only from burning charcoal but also from spa water, fermenting wine and eructions.