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Increasing the temperature the number of particles remain constant and the pressure increase.
Use the ideal gas law, PV=nRT. P= pressure V= volume n= number of moles R= gas law constant T= temperature If you have P, V, R, T then you can solve for "n" to find the number of moles. There are a number of ways and variations that you can go about finding the number of moles, but all would involve the ideal gas law or a similar formula.
See the Related Question:"How do you solve an Ideal Gas Law problem"Standard pressure is 1 ATM and standard temperature is 0 °C which is 273.15 K
The most important factor is the temperature.
Argon is a gas, so it depends on temperature and pressure. At standard temperature and pressure, 1 mole of ideal gas takes up 22.4 liters, which is 22400 cubic centimeters. There are 6.023 x 10^23 atoms in 1 mole. So dividing gives 2.69 x 10^19 atoms per cm³ at standard temperature & pressure (1 atmosphere & 0° C)
There are three elements in period 2 that are gases at room temperature and standard pressure: nitrogen (N), oxygen (O), and fluorine (F).
Standard temperature is 0 degrees Celsius so you are looking for the elements that have a melting point above 0 degrees Celsius. The answer is 4 elements. Elements E, G, L, and Q.
There are five elements in Group 17 (also known as the halogens) that are gases at room temperature at standard pressure: fluorine (F2), chlorine (Cl2), bromine (Br2), iodine (I2), and astatine (At2).
Chlorine is a member of the Halogen group of elements. Under standard conditions of temperature and pressure Chlorine is a highly reactive yellowish green gas. It is a di-atomic element, number 17 in the periodic system: Cl2
Elements in the table are identified by different things. What they are made of, atomic mass, and atomic number. Elements can also be identified by what state of matter they are at zero degrees Celsius and standard pressure which 1atm. The most current, standard table has 117 different elements.
To calculate the volume of natural gas in standard cubic meter at standard pressure, you can use the ideal gas law equation: V = nRT/P, where V is the volume in standard cubic meters, n is the number of moles of gas, R is the ideal gas constant, T is the temperature in Kelvin, and P is the standard pressure. Given that standard pressure is typically defined as 1 atmosphere or 101.325 kPa, you can plug in these values along with the temperature and number of moles of gas to calculate the volume of natural gas in standard cubic meter at standard pressure.
we first find the number of moles( number of moles= mass/molar mass). the we can find the volume by using the formule( volume=number of moles multiplyd by the molar volume)
To determine the number of moles of argon gas required to fill a volume of 116.7 L, we first need to convert the volume to liters. Using the ideal gas law equation, PV = nRT, where P is pressure, V is volume, n is the number of moles, R is the ideal gas constant, and T is temperature, we can calculate the number of moles. Given that argon gas is at STP (standard temperature and pressure), we can use the standard values of 1 atm for pressure and 273 K for temperature.
STP stands for standard temperature and pressure. Neon is a chemical element that is a gas at STP. The symbol for neon is Ne and it has the atomic number 10.
The state of nitrogen is gas at 298 K. Nitrogen's symbol is N and it;s atomic number is 7.
Increasing the temperature the number of particles remain constant and the pressure increase.
Th elements that form stable* diatomic molecules at standard temperature and pressure are: Atomic number 1: H Atomic number 7: N Atomic number 8: O Atomic number 9: F Atomic number 17: Cl Atomic number 35: Br Atomic number 53: I _____________________________________________________ *Atomic number 85, At, would be expected chemically to form diatomic molecules, but all its isotopes are radioactively unstable.