The Ideal Gas Law has more variables than Boyle's Law, and it contains the ideal gas constant, R. The ideal gas law is PV = nRT, where T is the absolute temperature and n is the number of moles of gas present in a system.   a. In Boyle's Law, PV = k (a constant). Rearrange the Ideal Gas Law so that the constant R is similarly equal to the variables.   b. If PV = k, and PV = nRT as well, express k in terms used in the Ideal Gas Law.    c. If you took laboratory syringe setup outside in the summer or put it in the refrigerator, would Boyle's Law be able to adequately describe what would happen to the volume of the system? Why?

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Problem 5.128QP: Plot the data given in Table 5.3 for oxygen at 0C to obtain an accurate molar mass for O2. To do...
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The Ideal Gas Law has more variables than Boyle's Law, and it contains the ideal gas constant, R. The ideal gas law is PV = nRT, where T is the absolute temperature and n is the number of moles of gas present in a system.
 
a. In Boyle's Law, PV = k (a constant). Rearrange the Ideal Gas Law so that the constant R is similarly equal to the variables.
 
b. If PV = k, and PV = nRT as well, express k in terms used in the Ideal Gas Law. 
 
c. If you took laboratory syringe setup outside in the summer or put it in the refrigerator, would Boyle's Law be able to adequately describe what would happen to the volume of the system? Why?
 
d. There are other gas laws aside from Boyle's Law, including: Charles' Law (V/T = k), Gay-Lussac's Law (P/T = k), and Avogadro's Law (V/n = k). All these laws feature a "k" value (a constant). What is different about k in these laws compared to the constant R in the Ideal Gas Law?
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