Homework: CO2 Volume, Pressure, Temperature, and Moles

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the number of moles, temperature, and pressure of a 200g sample of CO2 under specific conditions. For part a, participants clarify that the number of moles can be determined using the molar mass of CO2, which is approximately 44g/mol, leading to about 4.55 moles. In part b, the Ideal Gas Law (PV=nRT) is suggested to find the temperature, emphasizing the need for the gas constant. For part c, the new pressure after increasing the volume to 200L while keeping temperature constant is calculated, with a final pressure of 0.55 atm noted. The conversation highlights the importance of understanding molar mass and the Ideal Gas Law in solving gas-related problems.
uniidiot
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Homework Statement


A 200g sample of CO2 occupies a volume of 110 L at a pressure of 1 atm.

a) What is the number of moles in the gas

b) What is the temperature?

c) if the volume is increased up to 200 L and the temperature is kept constant. what is the new pressure.


Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution


a) 110/24.7 = 4.45 ( i think that's right)

b) pV = constant is that constant the temperature?

if so the temperature = 1 x 110 = 110

c) ( p1 v1 ) / T1 = ( p2 V2 ) / T2

(1 x 110) / 110 = ( p2 x 200) / 110

p2 = (1 x 110 x 110) / (110 x 200) = 0.55


i'm not sure if I'm doing this right can anyone help?

THANKS!
 
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For part a)

I'm sorry, but I don't understand what you're doing here. HINT: How many grams in one mole of CO2?

For Part b)

I think you're thinking of the Ideal Gas Law. If so, that is:

PV=nRT=NkT

where n=number of moles, R=gas constant, N=number of molecules, k=Boltzman's constant.

If you can do the above, then you should get part c) right, since your method above was correct.

Good Luck!
 
Last edited:
A) how about a few units? What is "24.7" here?

b) no, not at all.

c) 0.55 whats? ATM here, despite having the wrong temperature.

EDIT: BLAST! beaten again by GO1 !
 
Chi Meson said:
EDIT: BLAST! beaten again by GO1 !

Heh! Sorry Chi, I'm just quick and sneaky like that!
 
ok well the ratio of CO2 is

12:32

one mole of C is 6.02x10^23 x 12

one mole of O is 6.03x10^23 x 16

but how do i work out how much of the 200g is carbon?

thanks so far!
 
ok scrap that last post lol,

1 mole of carbon-12 is 12 grams,
1 mole of oxgen-16 is 16 grams,

so i still need to know how much of the 200g is carbon.

thanks
 
CO2 is a molecule consisting of one atom of carbon and two of oxygen. So one mole of CO2 is one mole of C plus two moles of O.
 
Dick said:
CO2 is a molecule consisting of one atom of carbon and two of oxygen. So one mole of CO2 is one mole of C plus two moles of O.

oh ok, so does that mean that the number of moles in 200g of CO2 is

0.2 (kg) / (6.02 x 10^32)

all x 3 becuase there are 3 moles per molecule
 
uniidiot said:
oh ok, so does that mean that the number of moles in 200g of CO2 is

0.2 (kg) / (6.02 x 10^32)

all x 3 becuase there are 3 moles per molecule

What is the mass of one mole of CO2? (you already gave the mass of one mole of C and of O so that will be easy.

Once you have the mass of one mole of CO2, you simply have

number of moles of CO2 = 200 gr/(mass per mole of CO2)
 
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