There are a number of possible results from the increase in temperature and pressure of a gas held at a constant volume. In some cases, the container will fail and there will be an explosion (this is what happens with bombs, for example). But the container may be strong enough that it does not fail. In that case, under conditions of high temperature and pressure, you might see increased chemical activity in the gas in question, perhaps new compounds would be formed, but that would depend upon the gas in question, as well as the specific temperature and pressure that you reach. At sufficiently high temperature and pressure you can also get nuclear reactions. The higher the temperature and pressure become, the wider the range of possible results.
The pressure increases.
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.
When the air temperature increases, the partial pressure of oxygen remains the same in the air. This is because the partial pressure of a gas in a mixture is determined by its concentration and is independent of the temperature, assuming the volume and moles of other gases remain constant.
pressure. simple answer is pressure. what happens is that as the gas gets hotter they move move and want more volume, if you don't allow them that volume the pressure goes up. when you get a gas colder, the opposite happens and makes the pressure go down.
When the temperature is increased, the volume of a container gets larger, and vice versa. This can be found by examining one of the fundamental laws of gasses, the combined gas law. It states that the product of pressure and volume, divided by temperature yields a constant value: pV/T=k Where k is a constant with units of energy/temperature. Thus, in order for k to remain constant, temperature and volume must be varied inversely to one another.
When the temperature of a gas is increased at a constant pressure, its volume increases. When the temperature of a gas is devreased at constnt pressure, its volume decreases.
When the Temperature increases, so does the Pressure.
If temperature remains constant and the volume of gas increases, the pressure will decrease. This is described by Boyle's Law, which states that pressure and volume are inversely proportional when temperature is constant.
The pressure increases.
In this case the pressure decrease.
In this case the pressure decrease.
Volume increases
If pressure remains constant, then volume is directly proportional to temperature. Hot air is quite loud.
When the temperature of a gas increases at constant pressure, its volume increases as well. This is due to the gas particles gaining kinetic energy and moving faster, leading to more frequent collisions with the container walls and thus expanding the volume.
According to Boyle's Law, as the volume of a gas decreases, the pressure increases, and vice versa. This is because the relationship between pressure and volume is inversely proportional when the temperature is held constant.
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.
It will increase? No it will decrease when the same amount of gas is held at constant temperature.