If you increase the molecules, or go from a gas to a liquid or vice versa, entropy increases.
According to Charles' Law: Volume of a gas increases as temperature inceases. But if the gas is contained in a rigid container then the volumme cannot increase, but the pressure will.
A gas typically increases the entropy much more than the increase in moles.
When the temperature of a gas increases in a flexible container, its volume also increases proportionally. This is because the kinetic energy of the gas particles increases with temperature, leading to more collisions with the container walls and hence an increase in volume.
It is true that, in a rigid container, when the speed of the gas molecules increases, the temperature of the gas rises. This has nothing to do with the speed or lack of speed of the gas as a whole.
When a gas expands into a vacuum, the entropy of the gas increases. This is because the gas molecules have more freedom to move around and occupy a larger volume, leading to a more disordered state and higher entropy.
The entropy increases, as going from a solid to a gas increases disorder or randomness in the system. This is because gases have more freedom of movement and energy compared to solids.
As a gas is heated, its entropy generally increases. This is because the increased molecular motion and disorder associated with higher temperatures lead to a greater number of microstates available to the system, resulting in higher entropy.
The entropy of the system increases during the sublimation of I2(s) to I2(g) because the randomness and disorder of the gas phase is higher compared to the solid phase. Therefore, the entropy of the reaction is positive.
The pressure of a gas in a container increases when the volume decreases, and decreases when the volume increases, following Boyle's Law. Additionally, the pressure of a gas increases with an increase in temperature, as per Gay-Lussac's Law.
If you increase the molecules, or go from a gas to a liquid or vice versa, entropy increases.
The entropy increases in this reaction, as the solid reactant (I2(s)) is becoming a gas (I2(g)), which represents a higher degree of disorder and randomness on a molecular level. The increased entropy contributes to the spontaneity of the reaction.
When the volume of a gas increases, the entropy of the system also increases. This is because there are more possible ways for the gas molecules to arrange themselves in a larger volume, leading to greater disorder and randomness in the system.
The speed of the gas particles will increase as they are heated. That is why the pressure in a container increases. The particles are hitting the walls of the container with more force as they are heated.
According to Charles' Law: Volume of a gas increases as temperature inceases. But if the gas is contained in a rigid container then the volumme cannot increase, but the pressure will.
When a gas is put in a container, it expands to fill the available space of the container, taking the shape of the container. The gas particles move freely within the container, colliding with each other and the walls of the container. The pressure inside the container increases as the gas particles exert force on the walls.
A gas typically increases the entropy much more than the increase in moles.