In SI units J K-1 mol-1 (Joules/ Kelvin mol or Joules per kelvin per mol)
in some older chemistry text books they quote L atm K-1 mol-1 (liter atmospheres per degree kelvin per mol)
(see wikipedia "Gas constant" for a list of the dimensions in other systems of units)
of course. that's why it's called the universal gas constant.
The Universal gas constant is R is independent of the gas taken.. While the Characteristic gas constant depends on the mol. mass of the gas.... The Characteristic gas constant of a gas or a mixture of gases is given by the molar gas constant, divided by the molar mass (M) of the gas/mixture. R(Characteristic) = {R}/{M} Well,this is just the basic...u can relate them both to the Boltzmann constant.. Here are some of the standard values for both: Values of R Units 8.314 472(15) J K−1 mol−1 0.082057 46(14) L atm K−1 mol−1 RChar for dry air Units 287.058 J kg−1 K−1 ok,i guess this is it!Hope this clears it...
The universal gas constant is denoted by R = 8.314 J/kgK, (but not G which denotes the Gibbs free energy of a given reaction at given conditions.
Values of general gas constant are: (value dependant on units) R = 0.08205746 [atm. ℓ.mol-1.K-1] R = 8.314472 [Pa.m3.mol-1.K-1 or J.mol-1.K-1] R = 1.99 [Cal.mol-1.K-1]
In SI units, the gas constant has a value of approximately 8.314 J / (mol x kelvin).
of course. that's why it's called the universal gas constant.
No
It is a universal constant used for all gases.
.0821
There are several different universal constants: Avogadro's number, Gas constant, Gravitational constant. The question needs to be more specific.
The Universal Gas Constant is 8.314 J/K/Mole
It is a universal constant used for all gases.
The Universal Gas constant can be used to relate the volume, temperature, pressure, and quantity of a gass to each other. The relationship is PV=nRT, or the pressure times the volume equals the number of moles times the universal gass constant times the temperature.
The Universal Gas Constant is 8.314 J/K/Mole
The Universal gas constant is R is independent of the gas taken.. While the Characteristic gas constant depends on the mol. mass of the gas.... The Characteristic gas constant of a gas or a mixture of gases is given by the molar gas constant, divided by the molar mass (M) of the gas/mixture. R(Characteristic) = {R}/{M} Well,this is just the basic...u can relate them both to the Boltzmann constant.. Here are some of the standard values for both: Values of R Units 8.314 472(15) J K−1 mol−1 0.082057 46(14) L atm K−1 mol−1 RChar for dry air Units 287.058 J kg−1 K−1 ok,i guess this is it!Hope this clears it...
The universal gas constant is denoted by R = 8.314 J/kgK, (but not G which denotes the Gibbs free energy of a given reaction at given conditions.
The value of universal gas constant in cgs is 1.985 calories per degree Celsius per mole