Chemistry Physics
Notes
7/7 & 14
Symbols P=pressure V=volume T= temp
STD= standard temp and pressure, which means 0 K & 760mmHg – occurs at sea level. As increase distance from sea level -> chg in PaP occur, therefore anesthesia is delivered differently depending on the Atm pr. They will give us a formula for this later.
PaP = partial pressure
Metric –
weight- gm, mg mcg
Volume- liter, ml
Length – meter
T – is a way of measuring the average kinetic energy of the molecules in a substance, or the average kinetic velocity of molecules, it is work or movt.
Potential energy is stored energy which is ready to produce work
Scales of temp F, C, K
C=5/9(F-32) F=9/5(c)+32 K=C+273
Matter – can be broken down into elements building blocks
Elemental building blocks – atoms
Atomic # - A# - corresponds to # of protons in nuc
Atomic wt-AW- mass of atom in terms of the weight of the neutrons and protons in grams. E’s weight not counted because of bonding and their too light anyway
Oxygen’s A#=8 (protons) AW=16(protons & neutrons)
Avagadro’s # - 6.02 X 10 23rd molecules are present , but the A# & AW will vary because the weight of each different atom varies
Conversion – 1ATM = 760mmHg = 14.07PSI
1 mmHg = 1.36 or 1.4 Cm H2O
Bohr Model – looks at reactivity,
- Theory of octets
- Valence (outer most shell) strives for stability by trying to achieve
noble gas configuration
Li – One e donated so configuration goes to He -> Li+
K donates one e so the configuration goes to Ar, -> K+
C has 4 valence e’s so depending on what C reacts with determines whether e’s are donated or accepted (kind of bond)
N-5VE O- 6VE F – 7VE
Bonding
Na – 1 e -> Na+
Polar – molecule has a + and – end, and e hangs more toward one
end of the molecule than the other. The distance from
electron to nucleus in not equidistant
Non Polar – e’s are equidistant between nuclei because there are
no neg – or+ forces pulling e to one side or the other
Univalent bonding- + valence # means atom donates e, and the
accepting atom is called a negative valence
Na+ Cl- refer to the valence of the atom
Isotopes are elements with different AW
Like C12 & C14. Isotopes react with elements with some differences
Cohesion – RT kinetic nrg and state of matter
Adhesion – similar concept but the molec are not alike?
Gas laws abbr IG=ideal gas
RG=real gas
PV=nRT – formula
P=pressure, V=volume, n=#moles, R=gas constant, T=temp
B=Boyles law
C=Charles
G=Gay-Lussacs
D=Daltons
G=Grahams
L=LaPlaces
Gas laws work for ideal gasses only, and is theoretical. The molecules considered are far apart and have no attraction
Rare gasses exist only in the lab and have negligible cohesiveness
They behave like Ig(ne, AR) when for eg (inc T & dec P)
P = The force exerted on a cylinder side wall
Collisions occur inside the cylinder
The inc P causes inc collisions
Dec P causes dec collisions
Pressure is measured by means of measuring a column of liquid (Hg or
H2O) in which the level of the column of liquid is maintained
In reducing the V of a gas (compressing it) means P is inc but T remains constant
All gas laws are different variations of the IG laws
Grahams Law-
- diffusion rate = 1/ mw sq root of mw, don’t forget radical sign
- when gasses are liberated, they dispense quickly in order to fill the space
that are occupying, think of trying to achieve = pressures in both areas
picture
Daltons law - the total pressure exerted is = to the pressure of all the gasses in the mixture.
If vapor pressure - (VP) of isoforane is 239, then figure its PaP when mixed in 100% O2. 100% = 1.0 x 760 = 760 - (239) = 521 = 68.5% O2 is mixed with isoforane
VPT - can stay constant - we are looking at the % of what gas exerts what pressure in a container. Then add the sums of all the pressures that are exerted
VP is the pressure necessary to keep the mixture in liquid state( liquid readily wants to go the gasseous state
Gas changes - Triangle G C=T&V at const P
T P G=T&P at const V
C V B B=V&P at const T
B - at constant T, P&V vary inversely - P1V!=P2V2
Eg 400mg x 8L = 1600 mg x y, y = 2L, notice the proportionality of the #'s
C - T&V at constant P, V directly prop to T in Kelvin at const P
T1( 9) T2 (x) T2 = 54
G - P directly prop to T is V is constant, PV = nRT, as gas is released form a cylinder of compressed gas, then pressure inside will gradually dec and will be indicated on gauge ( think of moles of gas being released)
Bourdon gauge - measures hi pressure in cylinder
LaPlaces law - tension may be defined a sthe internal force generated by a structure - for Cylinders - T = Pr where P- pr of fld in cyl, r- radius, T-tension
blood vs - the tension in the wall is proportional to the
radius, therefore the larger the radius, the
higher the tension , and the > likely the vs is to
rupture
heart - > filling pressure = > tension in the ventricular
wall, which is related to Starling & preload
Spheres - T = (Pr) / 2
Alveoli - with surfactant open and round,
collapsed with out surfactant -
Critical Temp is associated with compressed gasses
- gasses will liquefy if sufficient pr is applied and T is below the critical
value.
Joule-Thompson effect-
Avagadro's Law - one mol of any gas at some temp has the same # of molecules( but probably wont weigh the same)
Gram Molecular Weight- is the weight of 1 mol of a substance
Diffusion - VanDer Waals forces
Ficks Law of Diffusion - a gas always diffuses from an area of > pr to area of
< pr
pressure
rate of diffusion = P1-P2(area)(soluability) / (memb thickness) (sq rt mw)
the diff rate is directly proportional to the Pa P gradient, the area of the membrane its passing thru, and the soluability of the gas that is diffusing thru the membrane
where you put it
2. hypotonic - lighter than CSF so it will go up
3. hyperbaric - heavier than CSF so it will go down
1,2 are usually used
Density = M / V Gas Density = GM wt / GM vol
GMV = Molec wt of the gas / wt of gas per liter
Know Vapor
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