For a certain gas in a closed container, the pressure has been raised by 0.4%, and the temperature was raised by "1 K". What temperature did the gas start at?

a) "250 K"
b) "200 K"
c) "298 K"
d) "300 K"

1 Answer
Jul 29, 2017

This is an impossible question. However, if we assume that the question should have written that the vessel is rigid, then I get an initial temperature of "250 K".


Well, as usual, when you see pressure, temperature, and "closed vessel" in the same sentence, we assume ideality...

PV = nRT

  • P is pressure in "atm".
  • V is volume in "L".
  • n is mols of ideal gas.
  • R = "0.082057 L"cdot"atm/mol"cdot"K" is the universal gas constant.
  • T is temperature in "K" (as it must be! Why?).

The closed vessel means very little to us; all it says is that the mols of gas are constant. It says nothing about the volume of the vessel being constant, as it could very well be a big fat balloon.

We apparently are given:

P -> 1.004P

T -> T + 1

n -> n

V -> ??? xx V

Substitute to get:

1.004P cdot V = nR(T+1) = nRT + nR,

where the written variables are all for the initial state and we interpret the question to mean a closed AND rigid vessel. So, we assume that ??? = 1.

Note that since PV = nRT, we can now write:

1.004nRT = nR(T + 1)

Then, divide by nR to get:

1.004T = T + 1

=> 0.004T = 1

=> color(blue)(T = 1/0.004 = "250 K")

which is one of the given answer choices. It doesn't mean the question can't be revised, but that is probably what the question actually meant.