Calculating Moles and Molecules of Oxygen in a Gas Cylinder

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around calculating the number of moles and molecules of oxygen in a gas cylinder, given specific parameters such as volume, temperature, and pressure. The subject area includes gas laws and the ideal gas equation.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Assumption checking, Mathematical reasoning

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants explore the application of the ideal gas law (PV = nRT) to determine the number of moles of oxygen. There are questions regarding the appropriate value of the gas constant R based on the units used. Some participants express uncertainty about their calculations and seek clarification on unit consistency.

Discussion Status

There is an ongoing exploration of the correct application of the ideal gas law, with participants providing feedback on unit conversions and the selection of the gas constant. Multiple interpretations of the problem are being discussed, particularly regarding the use of different units for pressure and volume.

Contextual Notes

Participants are addressing potential discrepancies in unit usage, particularly between Pascals and atmospheres, and the implications this has on the calculations. There is an emphasis on the importance of maintaining unit consistency throughout the problem-solving process.

nafo man
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Homework Statement


A gas cylinder contains of 0.8 × 10^-3 m^3 volume oxygen.the temperature of the oxygen is 320k,and the pressure of the gas is 1.5 × 10^6 Pa.how to calculate:
number of moles and molecules of Oxygen?
mass of Oxygen if its molar mass is 32.0 × 10^-3 kg ?
The mass of a single molecule of gas?

Homework Equations



PV = nRT → n=PV/RT

The Attempt at a Solution


PV = nRT → n=PV/RT
p=1.5 × 10^6 Pa
T=320 k
V= 0.8 × 10^-3 m^3 = 0.8 litre.
Is the value of the R is 0.082L atm/mol K ?
so n= 1.5 x10^6 x 0.8/0.082 x 320

n=5 716.46341
is this the right way for part one?
thanks
 
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You are on the right track, but R value is wrong. Please check wikipedia page on gas constant and select R value that fits all units you use. Alternatively, convert all data to units of your R constant.
 
i am not sure,where did i go wrong?
 
For example: you have pressure in Pascals, but you try to use R with pressure in atm.
 
if i am using atm and liters, then the value of R to use is 0.082L atm/mol K ?
 
n=PV/RT
P=1.5x10^6
V=0.8x10^-3
T=300 k
R=8.31
n=(1.5x10^6 x 0.8x10^-3)/8.31x300)
 
1200 / 2493 = 0.481347774
 
am i on right track?
 
  • #10
the value of R=0.082 is in litre
n=1200/24.6 =48.78
I hope this is the right answer
 
  • #11
It is not about hope, it is about calculations.

Please don't ignore units - you do it all the time:

nafo man said:
n=PV/RT
P=1.5x10^6
V=0.8x10^-3
T=300 k
R=8.31
n=(1.5x10^6 x 0.8x10^-3)/8.31x300)

so you are not sure what units your answer has.

List all the units in your calculations - see what cancels out, what is left, then you will know if what you did is OK.

Even if I will tell you if the number you listed is right, you will still have no idea why.
 

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