303 K is a temperature measured in the Kelvin scale (starting at absolute zero). It's equal to about 30 degrees Celsius or 86 degrees Fahrenheit. The temperature of a hot summer day.
Volume refers to how much space something takes up. 25 L means 25 liters or a little more than six and a half US gallons. About the space inside a large microwave.
1 mol N2 = 28g 30C = 303K At STP, 1mol * 273K is proportional 24L * 760torr. (PV = nRT) Then we do a little bit of stoichiometry... 10g * 1mol/28g * 24L*760torr/(1mol*273K) * 303K * xL/750torr = 9.6402 L 10.0g of N2 at 30C and 750torr should occupy 9.6402L
5/6 of 30L is 25L
I seem to recall that [ P V = K T ]. Let's see whether that helps us here. [ P V / T ] is a constant. Initial [ P V / T ] = [ 1 x 25 / 288 ] Final [ P V / T ] = [ 1 x V / 303 ] = [ 1 x 25 / 288 ] V/303 = 25/288 V = (303 x 25)/(288) = 26.302 liters
There are 16.67 bottles of 1.5 liters in 25 liters.
To convert 255 mL of CO2 from 30°C and 85.0 kPa to STP (0°C and 101.3 kPa), you can use the combined gas law. First, convert the temperature to Kelvin (303 K) and pressure to atm (0.85 atm), then use the formula: (P1V1/T1) = (P2V2/T2) to find the volume at STP. This calculation will show that at STP, the volume of 255 mL of CO2 would be approximately 241 mL.
250ml = .25l
By the way, it's a 2.5 Liter engine, the system saved it as a 25L for whatever reason.
1 mol N2 = 28g 30C = 303K At STP, 1mol * 273K is proportional 24L * 760torr. (PV = nRT) Then we do a little bit of stoichiometry... 10g * 1mol/28g * 24L*760torr/(1mol*273K) * 303K * xL/750torr = 9.6402 L 10.0g of N2 at 30C and 750torr should occupy 9.6402L
That is 5 litres
5/6 of 30L is 25L
You pull the trigger . :)
Use this nice converter. Scroll down to related links and look at "Conversion of temperatures and formulas".
The highest temperature is 303 kelvin.
25 litres of what? Depending on the density of the material, the answer varies. 25l of sand will weigh a whole lot more that 25l of feathers. If you mean water, 1l of water weighs 1kg, so 25l of water weighs 25kg. That is water at (I think) 20C at sea level. Hope this answers your question.
NO
That is 110.231 cups.
25 litres is 110.231 cups