Use general gas law: V = n.R.T / p
in which:
n = number of moles (to be filled in)
R = gas constant = 8.20*10-2 (L.atm.K-1.mol-1)
T = tempeature (K) = 273 K (stand.T)
p = pressure (atm) = 1.00 atm (stand.P)
So 1 mole takes 22.4 Liter at STP
To calculate the volume of CO2 at STP (Standard Temperature and Pressure), you can use the ideal gas law equation: PV = nRT. First, find the number of moles of CO2 using the ideal gas law equation. Then, use the molar volume of a gas at STP (22.4 L/mol) to find the volume at STP.
The volume of 10.9 mol of helium at STP is 50 litres.
That's going to depend on the substance, which the question neglects to identify. --------------------------------------------------- The volume of any gas at STP (pressure of 1 ATM & temp.: 0oC) is approximately 22.41 L/mol or 22,410 mL/mol. So you need to find out how much gas you have to begin with (# of moles) to find the volume of the gas at STP.
The amount of oxygen is 0,067 moles.
To find the volume occupied by 20.4 liters of CO2 at STP (Standard Temperature and Pressure, defined as 0°C and 1 atm), we can use the ideal gas law and the concept of proportionality. At STP, 1 mole of gas occupies 22.4 liters, and 1200 torr is approximately 1.58 atm. Using the combined gas law, we can calculate the volume at STP: [ V_{STP} = V_{initial} \times \frac{P_{initial}}{P_{STP}} \times \frac{T_{STP}}{T_{initial}} ] Substituting the known values, the volume at STP will be approximately 12.9 liters.
At standard temperature and pressure (STP), the gas that occupies the highest volume is hydrogen.
At standard temperature and pressure (STP), the molar volume of a gas is approximately 22.4 L. To find the volume of 150g of ozone (O3) at STP, you would first convert the mass of ozone to moles, then use the molar volume to find the volume.
At STP conditions, 11g of SO2 will occupy a volume of approximately 5.6 liters.
Using the ideal gas law (PV = nRT), we can calculate the volume of gas at STP. First, we need to convert the number of molecules to moles by dividing by Avogadro's number. Then, we can use the volume of 1 mole of gas at STP, which is 22.4 liters. Calculate V = (5.4x10^24 / 6.022x10^23) * 22.4 to find the volume in liters.
To calculate the volume of hydrogen produced at STP when 13.49g of aluminum reacts with sulfuric acid, you first need to determine the moles of aluminum and then use the balanced chemical equation to find the moles of hydrogen produced. Finally, you can use the ideal gas law to calculate the volume of hydrogen. The molar volume of any gas at STP is 22.4 L.
First find out how many moles of gas are collected under the given conditions using the Ideal Gas Law.See the Related Questions link to the left for how to do that. Then use that number of moles and determine the volume of that much gas at STP, also using the Ideal Gas Law question to the left.
To find the volume of the acetylene gas at STP, we can use the ideal gas law equation: PV = nRT. First, we must convert the given mass of acetylene gas to moles using its molar mass. Then, knowing STP conditions (standard temperature = 273 K and standard pressure = 1 atm), we can calculate the volume.