If the vapour density for a gas is 20, then what is the volume of "20 g" of this gas at NTP?
1 Answer
I get about
This is an old term for the ratio of the density to the density of
rho_V = rho_"gas"/rho_(H_2)
Densities here are in
PM = rhoRT ,where
M is molar mass in"g/mol" and the remaining variables should be well-known...
P is pressure in"atm" as long asR = "0.082057 L"cdot"atm/mol"cdot"K" .
T is temperature in"K" .
Thus,
rho_"gas"/rho_(H_2) ~~ (PM_"gas""/"RT)/(PM_(H_2)"/"RT) ~~ M_("gas")/(M_(H_2))
Thus, the molar mass of the gas is apparently...
M_("gas") ~~ overbrace(20)^(rho_V) xx overbrace("2.0158 g/mol")^(M_(H_2)) ~~ "40.316 g/mol"
And the mols of this would be...
20 cancel"g gas" xx "1 mol"/(40.316 cancel"g") = "0.4961 mols"
So, at
color(blue)(V_(gas)) ~~ (nRT)/P
~~ (("0.4961 mols")("0.082057 L"cdot"atm/mol"cdot"K")("293.15 K"))/("1 atm")
~~ color(blue)("11.93 L")