The slowest rate of effusion will be exhibited by the gas with the highest molar mass. For example, Xenon will diffuse at a slower rate than Helium, and chlorine will diffuse at a slower rate than fluorine.
If the choices are Bromine, Chlorine, Ammonia, and Hydrogen, it would be Hydrogen. It's the lightest, making it the fastest.
Ne
True.
The rate of effusion is inversely related to the square root of the molar mass. Or stated another way, the larger or heavier the gas, the slower the effusion rate. Nitrogen gas (N2) has a molar mass of 28 g/mole and oxygen gas (O2) has a molar mass of 32 g/mole. Nitrogen will diffuse faster. rate N2/rate O2 = sqrt 32/sqrt 28 = 5.66/5.29 = 1.07. So, N2 effuses 1.07x faster than O2, or 7% faster. For more information on this, look up Graham's Law of Effusion.
Gases
gases with the higher molar mass
Hydrogen
The rate of effusion of two gases in a mixture is inversely proportional to the square roots of their molar masses.
The rate of effusion for nitrogen is higher.
The larger the particle size, the slower it will diffuse. This is given by Graham's Law of effusion which states that the rate of effusion is inversely related to the square root of the molar mass of the gas.
The larger the particle size, the slower it will diffuse. This is given by Graham's Law of effusion which states that the rate of effusion is inversely related to the square root of the molar mass of the gas.
True.
effusion
The larger the particle size, the slower it will diffuse. This is given by Graham's Law of effusion which states that the rate of effusion is inversely related to the square root of the molar mass of the gas.
Graham's law of effusion.
Graham's law of effusion states that the rate of effusion of a gas is inversely proportional to the square root of its molar mass. In other words, lighter gases effuse or diffuse at a faster rate than heavier gases under the same conditions.
A process related to diffusion is effusion, the process by which a gas escapes from a container into a vacuum through a small hole. The rate of effusion is also related to root mean square velocity-heavier molecules effuse more slowly than lighter ones. The rate of effusion-the amount of gas that effused in a given time- is inversely proportional to the square root of the molar mass of the gas.
i think there is no such CONFUSION in chemistry . but diffusion and effusion .
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