Gases obey Charles' Law, so T1V2 = T2V1: that is, as temperature increases, so does volume, as temperature decreases, so does volume... so long as the pressure is adjusted or allowed to be constant.
For more, check out Charles' Law.
Generally speaking - if you lower the temperature of a gas, it becomes more dense. If the temperature is lowered sufficiently it will start to condense into a liquid.
Increased density and temperature.
the higher the temperature, the higher the volume of a solid - michelle strafer
- Weak intermolecular forces -Low density
Doug will need a pressure gauge to measure the pressure of the gas, a temperature gauge to measure the temperature of the gas, and a container to hold the gas while adjusting the pressure.
The temperature at which the second virial coefficient of a real gas is zero is known as the Boyle temperature. At this temperature, the real gas behaves ideally according to the van der Waals equation of state.
No, it does affect the volume of a gas according to the ideal gas law (PV=nRT).
yes
There are four factors that affect gas pressure. The ideal gas law enumerates them: Pressure = number of gas molecules * constant describing the particular gas's behavior * temperature of the gas / volume in which the gas is confined
Increasing the temperature of a solvent decreases the solubility of a gas Generally, increasing solvent temperature decreases the solubility of gases.
Temperature, pressure, and volume are the three main factors that affect the behavior of gases. Changes in these properties can result in variations in the volume, pressure, and temperature of the gas.
It affects pressure, not volume.
A real gas behaves most like an ideal gas when it is at low pressure and high temperature.
The volume of gas depends on the temperature, pressure, and number of gas particles present. These factors affect the amount of space the gas particles occupy.
Generally speaking - if you lower the temperature of a gas, it becomes more dense. If the temperature is lowered sufficiently it will start to condense into a liquid.
by changing the gases to real water
Increased density and temperature.