An air compressor has a pressure of "5200 Torr" and contains "200 L" of compressed air. If the container ruptures, what is the volume of air that escapes through the rupture?

1 Answer
Nov 25, 2017

The volume of air that escapes through the rupture is ~~"1000 L".

Explanation:

This is an example of Boyle's law, which states that the volume of a given amount of gas varies inversely with the applied pressure when temperature and mass are kept constant. This means that as the volume increases, the pressure increases, and vice-versa. The equation to use is:

P_1V_1=P_2V_2,

where:

P is pressure and V is volume.

We aren't given altitude, so I'm going to use the pressure at sea level for P_2. When the hose ruptured, the pressure would have been immediately decreased to that of the air pressure at the altitutde of the air compressor.

Organize data:

Known

P_1="5200 torr"

V_1="200 L"

P_2="760.00 torr"

Unknown

V_2

Solution

Rearrange the equation to isolate V_2. Plug in the known data and solve.

V_2=(P_1V_2)/(P_2)

V=(5200color(red)cancel(color(black)("torr"))xx200"L")/(760.00color(red)cancel(color(black)("torr")))="1000 L" to one significant figure due to "200 L".