47 degrees Celsius
47
A fixed quantity of gas at a constant pressure exhibits a temperature of 27 degrees Celsius and occupies a volume of 10.0 L. Use Charles's law to calculate: the temperature of the gas in degrees Celsius in atmospheres if the volume is increased to 16.0 L
751.5 mmHg = 0.9888 atmospheres
The answer is in the question itself:760 mmHg (= 760/760 ) = 1.00 atm , so1000 mmHg = 1000/760 = 1.32 atm
the answer is 0.99 :)
PAO2 - PaO2 ****************************************** PAO2 is the Alveolar Air Equation: PAO2 = FiO2 (Pb- Ph20) - PACO2/R Notes: Pb = 760 mmHg Ph20 = 47 mmHg R = 0.8
The volume is 0,446 L.
30 degrees Celsius = 303,15 K752 mmHg = 0,9894737 atmosphere
A fixed quantity of gas at a constant pressure exhibits a temperature of 27 degrees Celsius and occupies a volume of 10.0 L. Use Charles's law to calculate: the temperature of the gas in degrees Celsius in atmospheres if the volume is increased to 16.0 L
747 mmHg
757.2 mmHg is almost atmospheric pressure (P = 760 mmHg) and therefore the vapour pressure is very close to the normal boiling point.According to the boiling temperature is T = 353.14 K = 79.99 °C at P = 757.2 mmHg.
You can't. Celsius per mmHg is a relationship of temperature to pressure. You can however solve for temperature if you have the value of pressure (e.g. if P= 10 mmHg and V/P = 2 ºC/mmHgthen V= (2 ºC/mmHg)(10 mmHg) = 20 ºC). If you have more information in the problem you might be referring to Gay-Lussac's Law, which compares two values of pressure and temperature to show the relationship (GL'sL: P1/T1 = P2/T2 ... but that would be pressure per unit volume). I'm not sure what you are looking for exactly, but you can't convert temp. to pressure (just like you can't convert feet to lbs.).
by grabing a gun and shooting yourself in the private parts
PV=nRT (pressure*volume=mols*value for R*temperature in degrees kelvin) R Values vary, but must match the unit for pressure---> .0821 ATM 62.4 mmHg 8.314kPa temperature must always be in degrees kelvin ( kelvin= degrees celsius+273)
0.0710 mol
The answer is about 30.9 kJ/mol
The boiling point of polyurethane is 136.3 degrees Celsius at 760 mmHg. Polyurethane is a polymer commonly used to make foams.
Yes it does. And STP also stands for 760 torr and 1.0 ATM and 273 K.