Charles' Law

Chemistry Level 1

Definition: Charles' law is a special case of the ideal gas law where the pressure of a gas is constant. Charles' law states the volume is proportional to the absolute temperature of a gas at constant pressure.

Formula:
1) P / V = k P/V =k
2) V 1 / T 1 = V 2 / T 2 V_1/T_1 = V_2/T_2

Question: A 600 mL sample of nitrogen is heated from 2 7 C 27^\circ\text{C} to 7 7 C 77^\circ\text{C} at constant pressure. What is the final volume in mL?

210.38 600 700 1711.11

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1 solution

Nicole Ling
Feb 14, 2014

The first step to solving gas law problems should be converting all temperatures to absolute temperatures. This is the most common place mistakes are made in this type of homework problem.

Ti = initial temperature = 27 °C Ti K = 273 + 27 Ti K = 300 K

Tf = final temperature = 77 °C Tf K = 273 + 77 Tf K = 350 K

i =initial , f=final

The next step is to use Charles' law to find the final volume. Charles' law is expressed as: Vi/Ti = Vf/Tf

where Vi and Ti is the initial volume and temperature Vf and Tf is the final volume and temperature

Solve the equation for Vf: Vf = ViTf/Ti

Enter the known values and solve for Vf. Vf = (600 mL)(350 K)/(300 K) Vf = 700 mL

Answer: The final volume after heating will be 700 mL.

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