Do gases have a definite volume?

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Gases do not have a definite volume; instead, they occupy the volume of their container. The ideal gas law (PV=nRT) describes the relationship between pressure, volume, and temperature, assuming the gas has expanded to fill the entire container. While the calculated volume can theoretically be smaller than the container's volume, in practice, gases will fill the available space unless constrained. If a gas is not occupying the entire container, it will not have a constant density, complicating the definition of its volume. Ultimately, the consensus is that gas volume equates to the container volume.
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I've been told that gases take on the volume of whatever container they're in but what about Pv=Nrt ?

Would it be possible that the calculated V is smaller than the container's volume?

Thanks
 
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That will mean gas is kept in higher pressure - but you can't keep higher pressure if gas is allowed to expand, which will happen if the container is larger.

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Couldn't other variables other than pressure have an impact on the calculated volume of the gas, like the number of moles?

thx
 
They do, but they don't change anything.

pV=nRT describes the equilibrium situation, after known number of moles of gas (n) expanded to fill whole container (V). Expansion is fast, but not infinite, so it may happen that gas doesn't occupy whole volume of the container. However, it will not have a constant density then - and you will have troubles defining its volume (in other words - you will have troubles showing where the gas ends, where is the border).

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So as far as I'm concerned, gas volume = container volume? :D
 
Yes.

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thanks for all your time and help
 
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