22.4 L. At STP 1 mole of any gas will always be equal to 22.4 L.
The volume is 64,8 L.
molar volume
1 mole occupies 22.4 liters. 0.5 moles occupies 11.2 liters at STP.
At STP, 1 mole of a gas will occupy 22.4 liters; or 0.5 mole will occupy 11.2 liters.
At STP, 1 mole of a gas will occupy 22.4 liters; or 0.5 mole will occupy 11.2 liters.
This depends on the temperature and the pressure. At standard temperature and pressure 1 mole will occupy 22.4 L, so multiply... 22.4 x 2.22 = 48.728 L at STP.
We know that one mole of any gas at STP occupies 22.4 liters of volume. We also know that one mole of carbon dioxide is 44.01 grams of CO2. If there are 44.01 grams of this gas in 22.4 liters at STP, then there will be about 0.98 grams of CO2 in half a liter (500 ml) of the gas at STP.
Not sure what you mean by "first letter is a c", but the volume of one mole of an ideal gas at STP is 22.4 Liters.
The molar volume doesn't depend on the identity of the gas. One mole of any ideal gas at STP will occupy 22.4 liters.
1mol of a gas occupies 24 dm3 at STP, so 2.2mol X 24 mol/dm3 =52.8dm3 or 5280cm3
One mole has a volume of 22.4l.So the volume is 224ml
stupid question