The Universal Gas Constant is 8.314 J/K/Mole
The Universal Gas Constant is 8.314 J/K/Mole
L •atm/mole•k
L •atm/mole•k
The volume varies inversely with pressure.
L •atm/mole•k
The volume of one mole of oxygen can be estimated by the ideal gas law. In this case, you will use V = nRT/P, where n is the moles of gas, R is the ideal gas constant, T is the temperature in kelvin, P is the system pressure.
Ideal gas Law PV = nRT where P is pressure V is volume n is moles R is a constant of 8.31 and T is temperature so if u multiply PV with T constant, that leaves nR, therefore you will always get mole of the air multiplied with 8.31
The ideal gas constant ( R ) with a value of 0.0821 has units of liters·atmospheres per mole·kelvin (L·atm/(mol·K)). This means it describes how much volume one mole of an ideal gas occupies at standard temperature and pressure. The units reflect the relationship between pressure, volume, temperature, and the amount of substance in the ideal gas law equation, ( PV = nRT ).
the ideal gas constant D:
It weights the same as one times the molar mass in g/mol. It is NOT important to be ideal, it even needn't to be necessarily a gas, only the kind of compound is important.
The ideal gas constant has units of liters • atm / (mole • Kelvin), also represented as L • atm / (mol • K) or J / (mol • K) in the International System of Units (SI). It depends on the units you are using for pressure, volume, temperature (atm, liters, Kelvin) and can be converted to different unit systems as needed.
The volume of a mole of any gas at Standard Temperature and Pressure (STP) is approximately 22.4 liters. This is known as the molar volume of a gas at STP and is a standard value used in gas calculations.