What Is the Volume of Dry Hydrogen Gas at STP?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on calculating the volume of dry hydrogen gas at standard temperature and pressure (STP) from a sample collected over water. The initial calculations determined the dry pressure to be 732.5 torr, leading to a calculated volume of 31.3 mL. However, confusion arose regarding the definition of STP, with some participants mistakenly using 25°C (298 K) instead of the correct 0°C (273 K). This misunderstanding is common, as many thermodynamic equations are based on 298 K, but STP is specifically defined as 273 K. Ultimately, the correct application of STP parameters clarified the solution.
gurerd
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Homework Statement


A 32.0 mL sample of hydrogen is collected over water at 20°C and 750.0 torr pressure. What is the volume of the dry gas at STP? (vapor pressure of water at 20°C = 17.5 torr)


Homework Equations



Ptot = Pdry + Pwet

P1V1/T1 = P2V2/T2

The Attempt at a Solution



Pdry = Ptot - Pwet = 750 - 17.5 = 732.5 torr

V1 = P2V2T1/P1T2 = (732.5 torr)(32 mL)(298K)/(760 torr)(293 K) = 31.3 mL

The answer in the answer key gives 28.7 mL
 
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What is STP?
 
STP is standard temperature and pressure -- which I used
T = 25.0 °C ( 298 Kelvin) and
P = 1 atm of pressure (760 torr)

Did I use these in the correct variables? Perhaps that is where I am confused?
 
gurerd said:
STP is standard temperature and pressure -- which I used
T = 25.0 °C ( 298 Kelvin) and
P = 1 atm of pressure (760 torr)
That's SATP. STP is T = 0°C.
 
Ah, what a silly mistake. It works out now!

Thanks so much DrClaude! I appreciate your time.
 
gurerd said:
Ah, what a silly mistake. It works out now!
You would be surprised how commen this mistake is. This is probably what SteamKing was alluding to. the main problem is that most thermodynamic is for 298 K, but STP was defined as 273 K.

gurerd said:
Thanks so much DrClaude! I appreciate your time.
You're welcome!
 
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