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31 May, 19:00

A sample of carbon dioxide gas occuples a volume of 2.5L at standard temperature and pressure (STP). What will be the volume of a sample of argon gas that has the same number of moles and pressure but twice the absolute temperature?

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  1. 31 May, 20:18
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    The correct answer is 5.0 L

    Explanation:

    STP are defined as T=273 K and P = 1 atm

    By using the ideal gas equation, we can calculate the number of moles (n) of the gas at a volume V=2.5 L:

    PV = nRT

    ⇒n = (PV) / (RT) = (1 atm x 2,5 L) / (0.082 L. atm/K. mol x 273 K) = 0.112 mol

    For a sample of argon gas, with the same number of moles (0.112 mol) but twice the temperature (T = 273 K x 2 = 546 K):

    V = (nRT) / P = (0.112 mol x 0.082 L. atm/K. mol x 546 K) / 1 atm = 5.0 L

    That is consistent with the fact that when a gas is heated, it expanses. So, if the temperature increases twice, the volume also increases twice.
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