How many moles of air are in the tank?

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I am having trouble setting up this problem. Especially part A of the problem. I think I have a good idea of what to do for part B, but could anyone give me any hints on how to find moles from the given information?


A 14.0 cm-diameter compressed-air tank is 40.0 cm tall. The pressure at 30.0 C is 150 atm.

A.

How many moles of air are in the tank?

B.

What volume would this air occupy at STP?
 
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Do you know the ideal gas equation? That should be all you need for both parts.
 
yes, pV = nRT... would the volume be 4/3 pi(7)^3*(40) = 57470.2 ?
 
No, if it's a cylinder the volume is 2\pi r^2 h.

\frac{4}{3}\pi r^3 is the volume of a sphere.
 
thanks, i always get the volume equations mixed up. using pV=nRT i got 150 atmospheres(pressure)*12315.04L(Volume)= n * .08206 (gas constant) * 303 (temperature K)

which gave me 1847256 = 24.86n

solving for n i got n = 74293.86... this seems like a lot of moles...
 
do i need to do an additional conversion to get volume into L?
 
I'd just convert atmospheres into pascals 1atm = 1.01x10^5 Pa, and use the standard form of the gas constant.
 
hmmm... that made it even worse... i took (15150000 pa)(12315.04 cm3) = n (8.3145) (303) solving for n gave me 74057610.2 ... this still seems like a lot of moles
 
Your volume should be in m^3.
 
  • #10
Just noticed your volume is out by a factor of two anyway, since the volume of a cylinder is \pi r^2 h = \frac{\pi d^2 h}{4}
 
  • #11
ahhh, I'm still getting a ton of moles... converting from cm^3 to m^3 i got 61.58 m^3...

so 15150000 pa (61.58 m^3) = 93286420

(8.3145) constant * 303 degrees K = 2519.29n

divide both sides by 2519.29

and i find that n = 370288
 
  • #12
1 cm^3 = (1/100)^3 m^3 = 1E-06 m^3
 
  • #13
ahhh, thank you...that was the problem... ok now I'm having a little bit of trouble with part B. it asks how much volume it would occupy at stp

at stp i know:
T= 0 C or 273 K
P=1 atm or 1.01 *10^5 pa

so using pV=nRt

(1.01*10^5)V = (37.1 mol)(273 K)(8.3145 constant)

solving for V i get 3.08 m3 and this answer is not correct. i don't see what i am doing wrong here.
 
  • #14
Isn't standard pressure 1bar, i.e. 1x10^5 Pa not that it makes a difference.
Rearrange the equation before you put the numbers is in it makes it much easier. V = nRT / P, I assume you're making some silly mistake because the numbers look correct.
 
  • #15
thanks, it was a silly error...
 

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