General Gas Law; PV=nRT just plug in your numbers and solve for 'n'
228.9 kPa
Generally, water boils at around 100 degrees C but it depends on the oxygen content and the altitude of the place where you are boiling it. Also the material out of which the water container is made affects the boiling point too. It's quite a complex question!
Yes, the vapour pressure of water at 10°C is 1.2 kPa and at 50°C is 12.3 kPa.
water boils at zero degrees then atmospheric pressure will be...........
Yes. As long as the pressure is below atmospheric pressure.
sfaas
Rigid container holds hydrogen gas at a pressure of 3.0 atmospheres and a temperature of 2 degrees Celsius. The pressure if the temperature is raised to 10 degrees Celsius will be 15 atmospheres based on the law of pressure for gas.
228.9 kPa
4.1 atm
i think a ten liter container at 800 degrees Celsius has more heat
1/2
Not at room temperature. But it is a molecular solid at temperatures below -78 degrees Celsius.
The Celsius scale is in fact based on water, it freezes at 0 degrees and boils at 100 degrees Celsius at 760 mm Hg pressure.
100 degrees Celsius or 212 degrees Fahrenheit
No chloroform can't be heated to ninety degrees Celsius in an open container. Heroin will be made if the chloroform dissolves colored impurities and settles to the bottom.
100 degrees Celsius is the boiling point of water, which happens to be 212 degrees Fahrenheit at standard pressure
That would be at absolute zero, where all molecular motion cease. The temperature is 0 Kelvin or -273.15 degrees Celsius or -459.67 degrees Fahrenheit.