Ideal Gas Eq: Solve O2 to F2 Pressure Change

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The discussion revolves around calculating the mass of fluorine needed to replace oxygen in a tank while achieving a different gauge pressure. Participants emphasize using the ideal gas law (PV=nRT) to relate pressure, volume, and the number of moles of gas, noting that volume and temperature can be assumed constant. The key point is that the number of moles of gas must change to accommodate the new pressure, leading to the equation P1/n1 = P2/n2. Clarification is provided that while the moles of O2 and F2 are not equal due to differing pressures, the relationship between pressure and moles remains crucial for solving the problem. The conversation highlights the importance of understanding the ideal gas law in determining the necessary calculations for gas replacement scenarios.
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Homework Statement



A tank contains 25.0 kg of O2 gas at a gauge pressure of 9.10 atm. If the oxygen is replaced by fluorine, how many
kilograms of the latter will be needed to produce a gauge pressure of 4.00 atm?

Homework Equations



PV=nRT

The Attempt at a Solution



For the O2 we know P, can find n (m=nM), and R is a constant. Still leaves one equation with two unknowns? Am I to assume some temperature, find the volume of the container, and then use that same temperature to calculate the mass of flourine. Is that valid?
 
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it's been a while since thermo but can't you negate the temperature and volume of the container because they are fixed? then you are left with the knowns and unknowns you need to solve? then it's P_1/n_1=P_2/n_2 right? forgive me if I'm way off.
 
jippetto said:
it's been a while since thermo but can't you negate the temperature and volume of the container because they are fixed? then you are left with the knowns and unknowns you need to solve? then it's P_1/n_1=P_2/n_2 right? forgive me if I'm way off.

I have no clue.
 
try breaking the problem into two parts:

if you wanted to maintain original pressure, how many kg of Flourine needed?

Hint no of moles must be the same, tho you don't need to calculate that figure.

and for rest of problem, since PV=nRT where V and T are same, R is constant you have relation where P is directly proportional to n.
 
Somebody help me please.
 
see above post..
 
Still leaves one equation with two unknowns? Am I to assume some temperature, find the volume of the container, and then use that same temperature to calculate the mass of flourine. Is that valid?
Yes. The volume is the same obviously, and the pressure, and you can assume the same temperature without loss of generality. So you can find n because R is always the same.
 
denverdoc said:
try breaking the problem into two parts:

if you wanted to maintain original pressure, how many kg of Flourine needed?

Hint no of moles must be the same, tho you don't need to calculate that figure.

and for rest of problem, since PV=nRT where V and T are same, R is constant you have relation where P is directly proportional to n.

How do you know the number of moles will be the same?
 
bpw91284 said:
How do you know the number of moles will be the same?

Because... that's the ideal gas law! :-p
PV=nRT
R is a constant.

For a given pressure, volume, and number of moles of an ideal gas, the temperature can be calculated.

For a given pressure, temperature, and number of moles of an ideal gas, the volume can be calculated.

For a given volume, temperature, and number of moles of an ideal gas, the pressure can be calculated.

For a given pressure, temperature, and volume, the number of moles of an ideal gas can be calculated.

In other words, given 3 of the following 4 parameters: P,V,T,n, you can calculate the value of the 4th. Since in your problem, P,V, and presumably T are being kept constant, n must also stay the same.
Of course, it's a poorly worded problem, because it makes no mention of what happens to the temperature - leaving us to assume it remains the same. However, you could probably argue that you could use twice as many moles of another "ideal" gas, provided you have 1/2 the absolute temperature. (since it's "a tank", we can probably assume the volume of the tank remains the same.)
 
  • #10
Correct method of solving.

PV=nRT
Since V,R, and T will be constant for both cases.

(P/n)_1=RT/V=(P/n)_2

So n_2 can be solved for, and then m_2 can be found.
 
  • #11
yeah bpw91284 has it right. drpizza, the pressure isn't staying the same so you have to solve for a different number of moles. so yeah it's like I said: P_1/n_1=P_2/n_2
 
  • #12
But it was broken down into 2 problems where the exchange of gasses would have required maintaining n at the same pressure. Please before taking others to task, read all the posts--if for no other reason than not to confuse the OP.
 
  • #13
denverdoc said:
But it was broken down into 2 problems where the exchange of gasses would have required maintaining n at the same pressure. Please before taking others to task, read all the posts--if for no other reason than not to confuse the OP.

So you think that n_O2=n_F2?
 
  • #14
Equal number of moles of gas occupies the same volume. As in at stp, one mole of any gas occupies a volume of 22.4dm3.
 
  • #15
exec said:
Equal number of moles of gas occupies the same volume. As in at stp, one mole of any gas occupies a volume of 22.4dm3.

PV=nRT
n=PV/RT

Same volume, different pressure, different amount of moles.
 
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