This articles outlines the historical development of the laws describing ideal gases. For a detailed description of the ideal gas laws and their further development, see Ideal gas, Ideal gas law and Gas
The gas laws are a set of laws that describe the relationship between thermodynamic temperature (T), absolute pressure (P) and volume (V) of gases. They are a loose collection of rules developed between the late Renaissance and early 19th century.
Three earlier gas laws:
Boyle's law (1662, relating pressure and volume), P1V1=P2V2
Charles's law (1787, relating volume and temperature)V1/T1=V2/T2, and
Gay-Lussac's law P1/T1=P2/T2(1809, relating temperature and pressure),
These equations are exact only for an ideal gas, which is a mathematical model. However, they are good approximations for many gases under many circumstances.
This law has the following important consequences:
If temperature and pressure are kept constant, then the volume of the gas is directly proportional to the number of molecules of gas.
If the temperature and volume remain constant, then the pressure of the gas changes is directly proportional to the number of molecules of gas present.
If the number of gas molecules and the temperature remain constant, then the pressure is inversely proportional to the volume.
If the temperature changes and the number of gas molecules are kept constant, then either pressure or volume (or both) will change in direct proportion to the temperature.
Other gas laws of historical importance include:
Graham's law is an empirical relationship between the rate at which gas molecules effuse through porous barriers and molecular weight. These early molecule-based laws developed into the full kinetic theory of gases.
Dalton's law relates the pressure of a mixture of gases and the partial pressures of individual components. This empirical relationship was later readily explained in terms of the ideal gas laws.