One.liter of an unknown gas weigh 24.3 grams at.standard pressure and -273 degree centigrade one possible formula of gas is 1 CO2 , 2 H2 3, O2 4, SO2?
2 Answers
None of the above! Your "gas" is a solid.
But let's treat this problem in a theoretical manner anyway...
Here we just seek the molar mass of the gas, and hence find its identity... The assumption is that it is ideal at high temperature and low pressure, neither of which is true here... but it is implied in the question to do so anyway
#PV = nRT#
#P# is pressure in#"bar"# .#V# is volume in#"L"# .#n# is mols of ideal gas.#R = "0.083145 L"cdot"bar/mol"cdot"K"# is the universal gas constant.#T# is temperature in#"K"# .
Now, we can solve for the mols, because we are given the mass.
#n = (PV)/(RT)#
Being modern people here, we use the post-1982 IUPAC ruling of
#n = ("1 bar" cdot "1 L")/("0.083145 L"cdot"bar/mol"cdot"K" cdot "1.15 K")#
#=# #"10.5 mols"# ...
...for which we apparently get:
#color(red)(M_m) = "24.3 g"/"10.5 mols" = color(red)("2.32 g/mol")#
The only one remotely close is
And we see that at
.See below
Explanation:
Alternative method:
Given this information, we need to find the molar mass of this gas in grams/mol to truly determine it's identity.
We will use the gas law constant:
We need the temperature in Kelvin so:
Use dimensional analysis until you're left with "g/mol":
This is about the molar mass of