Ideal gas law constant R conversion

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on converting the ideal gas law constant R from 8.31 (Pa * cu. meters) / (mol * Kelvin) to 10.73 (psia * cu. ft) / (lb. * mol * Rankine). The user initially struggles with the conversion, particularly with the additional pounds in the denominator of the target value. It is clarified that the discrepancy arises from the need to convert between gram-Moles and lb-Moles, using the conversion factor of 1 gram = 0.0022 lb. A suggestion is made to use a specific software tool that can automate these unit conversions for better accuracy. Understanding these conversions is essential for accurate calculations in gas law applications.
sitinduk
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Hi, not sure if this is the right forum to ask this in, but I was trying to convert the ideal gas law constant R (from PV = nRT) from:

8.31 (Pa * cu. meters) / (mol * Kelvin) to the equivalent:

10.73 (psia * cu. ft) / (lb. * mol * Rankine)

Here's the conversion factors I've been using:
1 Pa = 1.4505E-7 psia (absolute pressure)
1 cu. meter = 35.315 cu. ft
1 Rankine = 1.8 Kelvin

What I don't understand is where does the extra pounds in the denominator of the 10.73 value come from? This is probably what's throwing off my calculations.

-Thanks
 
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gm-Mole vs. lb-Mole

In the first equation "mole" means "gram-Mole"; in the second the unit is "lb-Mole". You need to convert between gm-Moles and lb-Moles.
 
Ahh, using 1 gram = 0.0022 lb I finally got it. Thanks alot, this has really been bugging me :smile:
 
I always use this
R = 0.082 \frac{atm \cdot l}{mol \cdot K} = 2 \frac{cal}{mol \cdot K} = 8.314 \frac{J}{mol \cdot K}
 
sitinduk said:
Hi, not sure if this is the right forum to ask this in, but I was trying to convert the ideal gas law constant R (from PV = nRT) from:

8.31 (Pa * cu. meters) / (mol * Kelvin) to the equivalent:

10.73 (psia * cu. ft) / (lb. * mol * Rankine)

Here's the conversion factors I've been using:
1 Pa = 1.4505E-7 psia (absolute pressure)
1 cu. meter = 35.315 cu. ft
1 Rankine = 1.8 Kelvin

What I don't understand is where does the extra pounds in the denominator of the 10.73 value come from? This is probably what's throwing off my calculations.

-Thanks

Take a look at:
http://www.adacs.com/menu/PDAcalc_units.php This program runs on a palm, PocketPC,windows and will do all the conversions AUTOMATICALLY for you. Download the user manual which has an example of the PV = nRT formula that shows how it automatically convert between the different units.
 
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