CO2(g)
If a fixed volume of gas is placed in a container, it will expand or contract to match the volume of the container. This is because gases have the ability to fill the entire volume of their container, assuming no other forces are applied. As the container size changes, the gas molecules will adjust by moving closer together or farther apart to occupy the new volume.
Use a container with a liquid (water). Mark the level of the liquid on the container. Insert the small solid sample. Mark the level of the liquid now on the container. compute the difference between the two marks. You can use traditional computation for calculating volume.
Yes, liquids have a fixed volume but not a fixed shape. They take the shape of their container due to their ability to flow and assume the shape of the space they occupy.
A 0.50 mole sample of helium will occupy a volume of 11.2 liters under standard temperature and pressure (STP) conditions, which are 0 degrees Celsius (273.15 K) and 1 atmosphere pressure. At STP, one mole of any gas occupies a volume of 22.4 liters.
Gases will expand or contract to the volume of the container they are in, so gases do. However, liquids have fixed volumes, so they do not. In other words, a liter of water will remain a liter of water whether it is in a bucket or a swimming pool. However, the same quantity of gas may have different volumes depending on the container.
The gas expand to occupy the volume of the container.
Placing a rock in a container does not alter the volume of the container, although it does occupy some of that volume.
To completely fill a closed 100.0 milliliter container, you would need a gas sample of NH (ammonia). Since gases expand to fill their containers regardless of the volume, any 5.0 milliliter sample of gaseous NH will take the shape of and fill the 100.0 milliliter container. The properties of gases allow them to occupy the entire volume available, so the specific volume of the original sample does not restrict its ability to fill the larger container.
Gases do not have a fixed shape or volume; they expand to completely fill the container they occupy.
If a fixed volume of gas is placed in a container, it will expand or contract to match the volume of the container. This is because gases have the ability to fill the entire volume of their container, assuming no other forces are applied. As the container size changes, the gas molecules will adjust by moving closer together or farther apart to occupy the new volume.
Yes, each sample of a substance occupies space due to its physical dimensions and the volume it occupies in a container. The amount of space a sample occupies is known as its volume.
Use a container with a liquid (water). Mark the level of the liquid on the container. Insert the small solid sample. Mark the level of the liquid now on the container. compute the difference between the two marks. You can use traditional computation for calculating volume.
This is a good working description of the gaseous phase of matter. A sample of gas will assume the shape and volume of its container, so the sample has no shape or volume of its own.
Yes, liquids have a fixed volume but not a fixed shape. They take the shape of their container due to their ability to flow and assume the shape of the space they occupy.
Gas has no definite shape or volume, as it will expand to fill the container it is in. Gas particles are in constant, random motion and have low intermolecular forces. Gases are also compressible and occupy the entire volume of their container.
A 0.50 mole sample of helium will occupy a volume of 11.2 liters under standard temperature and pressure (STP) conditions, which are 0 degrees Celsius (273.15 K) and 1 atmosphere pressure. At STP, one mole of any gas occupies a volume of 22.4 liters.
Gases will expand or contract to the volume of the container they are in, so gases do. However, liquids have fixed volumes, so they do not. In other words, a liter of water will remain a liter of water whether it is in a bucket or a swimming pool. However, the same quantity of gas may have different volumes depending on the container.