First, you start by listing all of your givens; this will help you know what you have, and what you need to find.
V1 = 2.8 L
T1 = 25 C + 273 = 300 K. The temperature always has to be in kelvin; so, if you degree Celsius, you have to convert it to kelvin by using the equation K= degrees Celsius + 273
V2 = 15L
T2 = ?
V1/T1 = V2/T2 By looking at our given, we know you have to use this equation.
2.8L/300K = 15L/T2 We have to cross-multiply. (Basic Algebra)
T2 2.8L/2.8L = 4500KL/2.8L
T2 = 1607 K
1607 K = 1334 C
Leigha Carmichael
Strange question. Volume? Perhaps density. There is no answer.
136.73 mL
all you need to do is predict what you think the answer is. this is easy
19.48
The volume increases.
That would take some doing, since Celsius is not even a unit of volume. As a matter of fact, "Celsius" is not a unit of anything.
A gas occupies 40.0 L at -123 Celsius. It occupies 80 L of volume at 27 degrees Celsius.
468ml
Leigha Carmichael
Celsius is a measure of temperature while litre is a measure of volume, you cannot convert from one to the other
The volume is 0,446 L.
Strange question. Volume? Perhaps density. There is no answer.
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
Water freezes and becomes ice at zero degrees Celsius. Also, water has the odd quality that it begins to expand below about 4 degrees Celsius. So the answer is that it would turn into ice and its volume would increase a little.
136.73 mL
Vf = 3.0/75 (150) = 6