Triple Point

Yeah correctTheChiScientist wrote:Easy.
Triple Point
acidbeaker wrote:2.50 L of gas originally at 60 ̊C is warmed to 145 ̊C.
1. What is the new volume if the pressure remains constant?
2. Who named this law?
1) 1.99 L
2) Jacques Charles if you mean who the law was named after
Shouldnt the gas expand?UTF-8 U+6211 U+662F wrote:acidbeaker wrote:2.50 L of gas originally at 60 ̊C is warmed to 145 ̊C.
1. What is the new volume if the pressure remains constant?
2. Who named this law?1) 1.99 L
2) Jacques Charles if you mean who the law was named after
It should expand. I get 3.14L but there is technically only one significant figure because of 60C. So it would be 3LMattChina wrote:Shouldnt the gas expand?UTF-8 U+6211 U+662F wrote:acidbeaker wrote:2.50 L of gas originally at 60 ̊C is warmed to 145 ̊C.
1. What is the new volume if the pressure remains constant?
2. Who named this law?1) 1.99 L
2) Jacques Charles if you mean who the law was named after
MattChina wrote:Shouldnt the gas expand?UTF-8 U+6211 U+662F wrote:acidbeaker wrote:2.50 L of gas originally at 60 ̊C is warmed to 145 ̊C.
1. What is the new volume if the pressure remains constant?
2. Who named this law?1) 1.99 L
2) Jacques Charles if you mean who the law was named after
1) 3.14 L
UTF-8 U+6211 U+662F wrote:Just going to ask the next question..
5 moles of a monatomic ideal gas isobarically and adiabatically expand by 1.5 L, changing from 100 degrees Celsius to 80 degrees Celsius. Find the final volume and pressure of the gas.
554.3 bars and 26.48 liters
Sorry, you're right, it should be contract, not expandMattChina wrote:UTF-8 U+6211 U+662F wrote:Just going to ask the next question..
5 moles of a monatomic ideal gas isobarically and adiabatically expand by 1.5 L, changing from 100 degrees Celsius to 80 degrees Celsius. Find the final volume and pressure of the gas.554.3 bars and 26.48 liters