number 2

Chemistry: Principles and Reactions
8th Edition
ISBN:9781305079373
Author:William L. Masterton, Cecile N. Hurley
Publisher:William L. Masterton, Cecile N. Hurley
Chapter1: Matter And Measurements
Section: Chapter Questions
Problem 38QAP: A gasoline station in Manila, Philippines, charges 38.46 pesos per liter of unleaded gasoline at a...
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number 2

Kenna Qkroyale
EDIT
Since 1 cubic centimeters = 0.001 litres,
Then 517.21cubic centimeters-517.21*10^-3=0.517 litres.
Practice
1. A helium-filled balloon has a volume of 2.75 L at 20. °C. The volume of the
balloon decrease to 2.46L after it is placed outside on a cold day. What is the
outside temperature in Kelvin? in C?
2. A gas at 65°C occupies 4.22 L. At what Celsius temperature will the volume be
3.87 L, assuming the same pressure?
Gay-Lussac's Law: Pressure-Temperature Relationship
You have just learned about the quantitative relationship between volume and
temperature at constant pressure. What would you predict about the relationship
between pressure and temperature at constant volume? For a fixed quantity of a
gas at constant volume, should be directly proportional to the Kelvin temperature,
which depends directly on average kinetic energy.
That prediction turns out to be correct. For every Kelvin of temperature change,
the pressure of a confined gas changes by 1/273 of the
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Transcribed Image Text:Kenna Qkroyale EDIT Since 1 cubic centimeters = 0.001 litres, Then 517.21cubic centimeters-517.21*10^-3=0.517 litres. Practice 1. A helium-filled balloon has a volume of 2.75 L at 20. °C. The volume of the balloon decrease to 2.46L after it is placed outside on a cold day. What is the outside temperature in Kelvin? in C? 2. A gas at 65°C occupies 4.22 L. At what Celsius temperature will the volume be 3.87 L, assuming the same pressure? Gay-Lussac's Law: Pressure-Temperature Relationship You have just learned about the quantitative relationship between volume and temperature at constant pressure. What would you predict about the relationship between pressure and temperature at constant volume? For a fixed quantity of a gas at constant volume, should be directly proportional to the Kelvin temperature, which depends directly on average kinetic energy. That prediction turns out to be correct. For every Kelvin of temperature change, the pressure of a confined gas changes by 1/273 of the Add to Story More
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