To calculate the percent error for the gas constant (R), you would compare the experimental value to the accepted value. Subtract the accepted value from the experimental value, divide by the accepted value, and then multiply by 100 to get the percent error. This will help you determine the accuracy of your experimental measurement of the gas constant.
The value of the molar gas constant is approximately 8.314 J/(mol•K). It is a universal constant used in the ideal gas law equation to relate the pressure, volume, temperature, and amount of gas in a system.
In SI units, the gas constant has a value of approximately 8.314 J / (mol x kelvin).
The value of the universal gas constant, denoted as R, is determined based on experimental measurements and is considered a fundamental physical constant in the field of thermodynamics. Its value is approximately 8.31 J/mol·K.
If any other units are used, the value will be different. --Depending on the units you chose the value of the constant differs
The ideal gas constant with a value of 0.0821 has units of liter·atm/(mol·K).
It is the value of the constant which appears in an equation relating the volume, temperature and pressure of an ideal gas. Its value is 8.314 4621 Joules/(Mol K).
In SI units, the gas constant has a value of approximately 8.314 J / (mol x kelvin).
The value of universal gas constant in cgs is 1.985 calories per degree Celsius per mole
If any other units are used, the value will be different. --Depending on the units you chose the value of the constant differs
There are several different universal constants: Avogadro's number, Gas constant, Gravitational constant. The question needs to be more specific.
The gas constant (R) makes both sides of the ideal gas equation (PV=nRT) equal. It is therefore called the proportionality constant in the ideal gas equation. The value of R is 8.314 J/mol˚K. If you divide the ideal gas constant by Avogadro's number you get R/NA=(8.314 J mol-1 K-1)/(6.022x1023 #of atoms mol-1)=1.38x10-23 J/(atoms x K) since the mol-1 terms cancel out. This value is the Boltzman constant (kb) usually expressed in units of J/K (energy/temperature) and it gives the average energy of a single atom or molecule at an absolute temperature T. Just multiply kb by T and you get energy in Joules.
L •atm/mole•k
Some common names for the gas constant, ( R ), include ideal gas constant, universal gas constant, and molar gas constant.
L •atm/mole•k
gas matter's characteristics is GAS
I suppose you mean physical constants such as the Heisenberg constant, the Boltzmann constant, the gas constant, the electron charge and so on. As you can see such values are independent on what kind of experiment you have, where, when and how.