Volume will increase. Think of it this way. If you heat a gas, it gets hotter. When a gas gets hotter, the atoms/molecules are "more active" and the pressure and/or the volume will go up. If your experiment with heating this gas sample must have a constant pressure, then volume will have to increase to give all those "more active" atoms/molecules more play room to prevent the pressure from going up.
the relation is given by charles law which says that the volume of a constant mass of gas at constant pressure is directly proportional to the temperature so increase in temperature causes an increASE in the volume
In a closed system, pressure and temperature are directly related. As temperature increases, pressure also increases, and vice versa. This is known as the ideal gas law, which states that pressure and temperature are proportional when volume and amount of gas are constant.
Boyle's Law states that the pressure of a gas is inversely proportional to its volume, assuming temperature and amount of gas remain constant. This means that as pressure increases, volume decreases, and vice versa. Mathematically, it can be expressed as P1V1 = P2V2, where P represents pressure and V represents volume.
According to Boyle's law, temperature and amount of gas must be constant. This means that as pressure and volume change, temperature and amount of gas should remain the same for the law to hold true.
In an ideal gas, the relationship between pressure and temperature is described by the ideal gas law, which states that pressure is directly proportional to temperature when volume and amount of gas are constant. This means that as temperature increases, so does pressure, and vice versa.
I wonder that by increasing temperature it will lead to a higher pressure.
When temperature is increased the amount of molecules evaporated is increasef and as a consequence condensation is also increased so vapour pressure increases.
At isobaric (pressure) expansion (volume increase) the temperature will increase because V is proportional to T for the same amount of gas (closed container) at constant pressure.
When the volume of a confined gas is reduced by half at a constant temperature, the pressure of the gas will double according to Boyle's Law. This is because the product of pressure and volume is constant for a given amount of gas at constant temperature. When the volume decreases, the pressure increases to maintain this equilibrium.
Temperature and amount (number of moles) is kept constant.
increase
pressure
The variable that Boyle's law holds constant is the temperature. Boyle's law states that the pressure of a gas is inversely proportional to its volume, as long as the temperature remains constant.
the relation is given by charles law which says that the volume of a constant mass of gas at constant pressure is directly proportional to the temperature so increase in temperature causes an increASE in the volume
The volume of the gas must remain constant for pressure and temperature to be directly proportional, according to Boyle's Law. This means that as the pressure of a gas increases, its temperature will also increase proportionally, as long as the volume is held constant.
In this case the pressure decrease.
In this case the pressure decrease.