6.02*10raised to the power of 23
1 mole of gas at STP occupies 22.4 liters.
Avogadro's number is the number of molecules in a mole of a substance. This is expressed as 6.022 141 29 E23 /mol. This is defined as the number of atoms in 12 grams of carbon12. A mole of any gas has this number of molecules. Any fraction of that mole must be divided into the number.
1 ton of LNG = 2,000 pounds of it
7.48 gallons fill one square foot.
No, it is a number.
1 mole of gas at STP occupies 22.4 liters.
It occupies 22.4 L
By knowing the no of moles in a gas. Because , in any gas one mole of gas occupies Avagadro number of molecules.
Yes, as motion in any particle is equivalent to heat
2(6.022*10^23) if we are assuming diatomic hydrogen gas (most stable). 6.022*10^23 if it is elemental hydrogen.
Hydrogen gas contains H2 molecules. 1 mole of H2 gas contains Avogadros number of molecules, 6.022 X 1023 therefore there are 2 twice as many atoms of hydrogen 12.024 X 1023 = 1.204 X 1024
Any number you like. A given mass of gas will expand (or contract) to fill any volume.
i am almost positive it is 22.4 Liters per mole. The conversion for molecules to mole is 6.023 x 10^23 (avogadros number) and the relationship from grams to moles is dependant upon the molecular weight of the molecule you are talking about.
It can be...... but you shouldn't be worried. It may be a number of different things but gas output goes up eventually
ANY closed cylinder of 4.0 litre will contain the same number of molecules of ANY gas as the 4.0 liter closed cylinder containing O2 gas at the SAME temperature and pressure, since then the volume only depends on the number of molecules, not on the kind of molecules of the gasses concerned
Gas Mark 2
0,5 moles of any gas