Kinetic Theory of Gases — How Molecules Create Pressure
A gas is a vast collection of molecules moving at high speed in completely random directions, colliding with each other and with the walls of their container. Trillions of collisions occur every second in a thimbleful of air. From this seemingly chaotic microscopic picture, the kinetic theory of gases derives precise, quantitative predictions for macroscopic properties — pressure, temperature, and the ideal gas law. It is one of the most beautiful examples in physics of how microscopic chaos gives rise to macroscopic order.
1. The Kinetic Model — Five Assumptions
The kinetic theory is built on a simplified model — the ideal gas — with five key assumptions:
| # | Assumption | Why It Simplifies Things |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | The gas consists of a large number of identical particles in constant random motion | Allows statistical averaging — individual trajectories don’t matter |
| 2 | The volume of individual molecules is negligible compared to the total gas volume | Molecules treated as point particles — no size effects |
| 3 | Intermolecular forces are negligible except during collisions | No attraction or repulsion between molecules when not touching |
| 4 | Collisions between molecules and walls are perfectly elastic | No kinetic energy lost in collisions — speeds unchanged on average |
| 5 | Collision duration is negligible compared to time between collisions | Molecules spend almost all their time travelling freely |
Real gases deviate from ideal behaviour at high pressures (molecules too close, intermolecular forces matter) and low temperatures (molecular volumes significant). At low pressures and high temperatures, real gases approximate ideal behaviour excellently.
2. How Molecules Create Pressure
Gas pressure arises entirely from molecules bombarding the container walls. Each collision exerts a tiny force; averaged over the enormous number of collisions per second, a steady pressure results.
Using Newton’s second law and the statistics of molecular motion, it can be shown that:
Pressure is higher when: there are more molecules (N↑), each molecule has more mass (m↑), or the molecules are moving faster (<c²>↑). This explains intuitively why pumping more air into a tyre increases its pressure, and why heating a gas in a sealed container increases pressure.
Scale of bombardment: At atmospheric pressure, a 1 cm² patch of wall experiences about 3 × 10²³ molecular collisions every second. Each collision is tiny, but the cumulative effect of this vast number is the 101,325 Pa of atmospheric pressure pressing on every surface.
3. Temperature and Molecular Kinetic Energy
Comparing the kinetic theory result (pV = ⅓Nm<c²>) with the experimentally established ideal gas law (pV = NkT, where k is Boltzmann’s constant), we can identify what temperature means at the molecular level:
Temperature is a measure of the average translational kinetic energy of molecules.
Hotter gas = faster molecules. Absolute zero (0 K = −273.15°C) is the temperature at which molecular translational motion would cease entirely — though quantum mechanics prevents this from happening in practice (zero-point energy remains).
This is why absolute temperature (Kelvin scale) is the natural choice for thermodynamics — it is directly proportional to molecular kinetic energy, with no arbitrary offset.
4. The Ideal Gas Law
The ideal gas law unifies three separately discovered empirical laws:
| Law | Discovered by | Statement | Condition |
|---|---|---|---|
| Boyle’s Law | Robert Boyle, 1662 | p ∝ 1/V (pressure and volume are inversely proportional) | Constant T and n |
| Charles’s Law | Jacques Charles, 1787 | V ∝ T (volume and temperature are proportional) | Constant p and n |
| Avogadro’s Law | Amedeo Avogadro, 1811 | V ∝ n (volume proportional to moles of gas) | Constant p and T |
Always use Kelvin: The ideal gas law requires temperature in Kelvin. 0°C = 273.15 K. Never substitute Celsius directly into pV = nRT — you will get wrong answers. To convert: T(K) = T(°C) + 273.15
5. Molecular Speed Distribution
Not all molecules move at the same speed — they follow the Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution. Three important speed measures are defined:
| Speed | Symbol | Formula | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| Root mean square speed | c_rms | √(3RT/M) = √(3kT/m) | Most useful for kinetic energy calculations; used in pV = ⅓Nm<c²> |
| Mean speed | c̄ | √(8RT/πM) | Average speed — slightly less than c_rms |
| Most probable speed | c_mp | √(2RT/M) | Peak of the Maxwell-Boltzmann curve — slightly less than mean |
For nitrogen (N₂, M = 0.028 kg/mol) at room temperature (300 K): c_rms = √(3 × 8.314 × 300 / 0.028) ≈ 517 m/s. Compare this to the speed of sound in air (343 m/s) — the close correspondence is not coincidental. Sound propagation relies on molecular motion, so the two speeds are related.
6. Worked Examples
Problem: 3 moles of an ideal gas are in a 15-litre (0.015 m³) container at 27°C. Calculate the pressure. (R = 8.314 J/mol·K)
Problem: Calculate the rms speed of hydrogen molecules (H₂, M = 0.002 kg/mol) at 300 K.
Problem: A sealed gas cylinder at 20°C has pressure 200 kPa. If heated to 100°C (constant volume), what is the new pressure?
7. Real-World Applications
Hot Air Balloon
Heating air inside the balloon increases molecular speeds, so heated air expands (Charles’s Law). Less dense hot air provides lift against cooler, denser outside air.
Thermometer
Liquid-in-glass thermometers work because liquids expand with temperature — a macroscopic manifestation of increased molecular kinetic energy.
Car Tyres
Tyre pressure increases when driving because friction heats the air inside. At constant volume, higher T → higher p (kinetic theory prediction).
Chemistry Labs
Every gas law calculation in chemistry — stoichiometry, partial pressures, gas collection — rests on the ideal gas law derived from kinetic theory.
8. Frequently Asked Questions
Conclusion
The kinetic theory of gases is a triumph of theoretical physics. Starting from five simple assumptions about molecular motion, it derives the macroscopic ideal gas law pV = nRT, identifies temperature as average molecular kinetic energy, predicts the distribution of molecular speeds, and explains pressure as the cumulative effect of molecular bombardment.
The central result — that temperature directly measures average molecular kinetic energy — transforms temperature from a vague notion of “hotness” into a precisely defined physical quantity with a clear molecular interpretation. This insight connects thermodynamics to mechanics and underpins all of statistical mechanics and physical chemistry.