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Gases

States of Matter: Gases

Gases

Gases and Their Properties

What you'll learn

  • Define a gas and list its main properties.
  • Explain why gases spread out to fill their container.
  • Identify common gases around us.
  • Connect gases to everyday Indian examples like LPG and balloons.

Key concepts

Level 1 - Meaning of a gas

A gas is a material that has no fixed shape and no fixed volume. Air is a gas (actually a mixture of gases) that spreads out to fill any space it is given, such as a room or a balloon.

Level 2 - Why gases spread out

The tiny particles in a gas are far apart and move around freely and quickly. This is why a gas spreads to fill all the space in its container instead of staying in one place like a solid or settling like a liquid.

Level 3 - Gases can be squeezed

Because the particles in a gas are far apart, a gas can be compressed into a smaller space, such as air pumped into a bicycle tyre. When more air is pumped in, more gas is packed into the same tyre.

Level 4 - Indian context

LPG cooking gas used in Indian kitchens is stored inside a metal cylinder under pressure. When the valve is opened, the gas escapes and spreads out, which is why a gas leak can be smelled across a whole room.

NCERT anchor: Looking Around 4, general observation of air and its properties (air as a gas around us)

Worked example

Filling a balloon with air

Step 1 - Take an empty, flat balloon.
Step 2 - Blow air into it steadily.
Step 3 - Watch the balloon expand and become round.
Step 4 - The air (a gas) spreads out to fill all the space inside the balloon.
Answer: A gas has no fixed shape or volume; it expands to fill whatever container it is given.

Smelling perfume across a room

Step 1 - Spray a little perfume in one corner of a room.
Step 2 - Stand at the opposite corner of the room.
Step 3 - Wait for a minute or two.
Step 4 - Notice the smell reaches you even though you did not move.
Answer: The perfume gas particles spread out on their own to fill the whole room.

Common mistakes

MistakeWhy it happensFix
Gases have no weight at allGases feel invisible and weightlessGases do have some weight, but they are usually much lighter than solids and liquids of the same size
A gas always stays where it is putConfusing gas with solid behaviourA gas spreads out on its own to fill all the space available to it
Only air is a gasAir is the most familiar gasSteam, helium, and carbon dioxide are also gases we meet in daily life
Gases cannot be squeezed at allGases seem to disappear when compressedGases can be compressed into a smaller space, as in a filled bicycle tyre or gas cylinder

Quick check

  • What are the two main properties of a gas?
  • Name two gases found in the air around us.
  • Why does a smell spread across a whole room?
  • Give one example of a gas being squeezed into a smaller space.
  • Stretch: Explain why a helium balloon floats while an air-filled balloon does not.

Revision tip: A gas has no fixed shape and no fixed volume; it spreads out to fill its container completely.

Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Gases.

Key Takeaways (TL;DR)

  • What you'll learn
  • Key concepts
  • Worked example
  • Common mistakes

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