A sample of helium has a temperature of 450 K. The gas is cooled to 248.9 K at which time the gas occupies 103.4 L? Assume pressure is constant at 3 atm. What was the original volume of the gas

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Answer:

[tex]\boxed{\text{163.3 L}}[/tex]

Explanation:

The pressure is constant, so, to calculate the volume, we can use Charles' Law:

\dfrac{V_{1}}{T_{1}} = \dfrac{V_{2}}{T_{2}}

Data:

V₁ = ?;            T₁ =    450 K

V₂ = 103.4 L; T₂ = 284.9 K

Calculation:

[tex]\dfrac{ V_{1}}{450} = \dfrac{ 103.4}{284.9}\\\\{ V_{1}} = 450 \times \dfrac{103.4}{284.9}\\\\ = \textbf{163.3 L}\\\text{The original volume of the helium was $\boxed{\textbf{163.3 L}}$}[/tex]

The original volume of the gas is 186.94 Liters

Further Explanation;

Charles' Law

  • Charles's law states that the volume of a fixed mass of a gas is directly proportional to absolute temperature at constant pressure.

That is;[tex]V\alpha T[/tex]

[tex]P=kT[/tex],  where k is a constant

At different temperatures and pressure then;

[tex]\frac{V_{1} }{T_{1} } =\frac{V_{2} }{T_{2} }[/tex]

In the Question;

We are given

[tex]V_{1} = ?\\T_{1} = 450\\V_{2} = 103.4 l\\T_{2} =248.9K[/tex]

Therefore;

[tex]V_{1} =\frac{V_{2} T_{1} }{T_{2} }[/tex]

[tex]V_{1} =\frac{(103.4 L)(450 K)}{(248.9K)}[/tex]

[tex]V_{1} = 186.94Liters[/tex]

Other Gas laws

Boyle's law

  • Boyle's law states that the volume of a fixed mass of a gas is inversely proportional to its pressure at a constant temperature.

That is;

[tex]P\alpha \frac{1}{V}[/tex]

[tex]P\alpha \frac{k}{V}[/tex], where k is a constant

Combined gas law

  • Combined gas law combines both Boyle's law and Charles's law.
  • It states that the volume of a fixed mass of a gas is directly proportional to absolute temperature and inversely proportional to pressure.
  • That is;

[tex]\frac{P_{1}V_{1} }{T_{1} } = \frac{P_{2}V_{2} }{T_{2} }[/tex]

Pressure Law

  • Pressure Law states that the pressure occupied by a gas is directly proportional to absolute temperature.

Keywords: Combined gas laws, Boyle's law and Charles's law

Learn more about:

  • Boyles’s law: brainly.com/question/1158880
  • Gay-Lussac’s law: brainly.com/question/2438000
  • Charles’s law:brainly.com/question/2438000
  • Combined gas law: brainly.com/question/2441061

Level: High school

Subject: Chemistry

Topic: Gas laws

Sub-topic: Charles's law

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