Gas is a unique state of matter with some extraordinary features.

By Patrick Pester

2023-07-26 03:00:54


Gases are one of the four fundamental states of matter alongside solids, liquids and plasma. They are made up of atoms and molecules like other matter but don’t have a fixed shape or volume. Gases take the shape of whatever container they are confined to and even expand to fill that container.

Though gases are often thought to be invisible, many actually have distinctive colours. For example, nitrogen dioxide is a browny-orange sort of colour, while chlorine is a greenish yellow. Even common gases like oxygen and water vapour absorb light, just not at ultraviolet and infrared wavelengths that we can see.

“There’s a sweet spot between the absorption spectra of oxygen and water where not much light gets absorbed. Lo and behold, that’s exactly the range of light that we’ve evolved to see!” chemist and science communicator Professor Mark Lorch, from the University of Hull, previously told Science Focus.

“So it’s not that gases are invisible, as such, it’s just that we can’t see atmospheric gases as they don’t have a colour in the visible range.”

What is the structure of gas?

The particles in a gas are able to move freely and separate from each other without a fixed arrangement. This makes the structure of a gas very different to that of a solid or liquid.

In a solid, particles are densely packed together in a fixed arrangement. In a liquid, molecules can slide past each other without a fixed arrangement but are still packed together. (Plasma is a superheated matter, such as lighting, formed when the normally neutral particles in a gas become electrically charged.)

Properties of gases

Some of the main properties of gases are as follows:

What are some key laws of gases?

Boyle’s law

Boyle’s law states that the pressure of an ideal gas will be inversely proportional to its volume at a constant temperature. In other words, increasing volume will decrease pressure, and decreasing volume will increase pressure.

The law is named after Anglo-Irish philosopher and scientist Robert Boyle, who discovered it in 1662. It is also known as Mariotte’s law because French physicist Edme Mariotte came up with the law independently in 1676.

Charles’s law

Charles’s law states that the volume of an ideal gas is directly proportional to the temperature at a constant pressure. This means that as the temperature of gas rises and drops, so does volume, and explains why gas expands when heated.

The law is named after French inventor and scientist Jacques Charles and his experiments in around 1787. However, fellow French scientist Joseph Gay-Lussac more formally established the law with experiments in 1802.

Avogadro’s law

Avogadro’s law states that equal volumes of different gases – at the same temperature and pressure – will have an equal number of molecules. Therefore, the amount of gas is directly proportional to the volume of gas. Italian scientist Amedeo Avogadro first proposed this law in 1811.

Ideal gas law

The ideal gas law combines the other gas laws to create an equation (PV = nRT) for a hypothetical ideal gas, which can be used to determine how gas behaves under different conditions.

What are some examples of gas?

What are the elemental gases?

The elements that are gases at room temperature (22°C) are as follows:

What are the noble gases?

The noble gases, or inert gases, are colourless and odourless gases made up of elements that generally don’t react with other elements or compounds. There are seven in total.

This list includes the synthetic element Oganesson, which is still being researched but not predicted to be a gas under normal conditions.

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