How Many Balloons Can Be Inflated from a Helium Cylinder?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating how many balloons can be inflated from a helium cylinder using the ideal gas law (PV=nRT). The cylinder holds 25.0L of helium at a pressure of 16500kPa and a temperature of 15 degrees Celsius. After correcting a likely typo regarding the balloon pressure, participants confirm that the correct pressure should be 108 kPa instead of 10^8 kPa. The calculations show that the cylinder contains approximately 172.36 moles of helium, and each balloon requires about 0.2788 moles, leading to a final estimate of 618 balloons that can be inflated from the cylinder. The importance of accurate unit conversions and arithmetic in these calculations is emphasized throughout the discussion.
relatively-uncertain
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Hi everyone, I'd really appreciate any help with this problem:

A helium cylinder for the inflation of party balloons hold s 25.0L of gas and is filled to a pressure of 16500kPa at 15 degrees celsius. How many balloons can be inflated from a single cylinder at 30 degrees celsius if the volume of one balloon is 6.5L and each needs to be inflated to a pressure of 10^8 kPa?


I know I'm supposed to be using the PV=nRT equation, but I have no idea as to how to approach this! Would really appreciate if anyone could offer me any help!
Thanks so much!
 
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From your equation, now many moles of helium are contained in the cylinder? How many moles of helium are contained in each balloon?
 
Chestermiller said:
From your equation, now many moles of helium are contained in the cylinder? How many moles of helium are contained in each balloon?

From PV=nRT , n= 172.36 mol

And for the balloon:
6.5 • 10^8= n•8.31•303
and n= 2.58x10^5 mol

Would this be the right steps to take?
Thanks!
 
relatively-uncertain said:
From PV=nRT , n= 172.36 mol

And for the balloon:
6.5 • 10^8= n•8.31•303
and n= 2.58x10^5 mol

Would this be the right steps to take?
Thanks!
Does it make sense to you that a balloon would have more moles than the gas cylinder?
 
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Chestermiller said:
Does it make sense to you that a balloon would have more moles than the gas cylinder?
I think the OP has a typo=each balloon should be inflated to ## P=108 ## kPa. ## \\ ## That would make sense, because normally a balloon gets inflated to a pressure just slightly greater than atmospheric pressure which is ## P=101 ## kPa . ## \\ ## A pressure of P=10^8 kPa would be out of the question. (A google shows they estimate the pressure at the center of the Earth to be about ## 3.6 \, \cdot ## 10^8 kPa. ).
 
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Chestermiller said:
Does it make sense to you that a balloon would have more moles than the gas cylinder?

I don't think so :/ But I am unsure of how to use any other figures in the equation ie. what to do with the data given in this question. What should I be doing instead that will give me the right number of mols in each ?
Thanks
 
Charles Link said:
I think the OP has a typo=each balloon should be inflated to ## P=108 ## kPa. ## \\ ## That would make sense, because normally a balloon gets inflated to a pressure just slightly greater than atmospheric pressure which is ## P=101 ## kPa . ## \\ ## A pressure of P=10^8 kPa would be out of the question. (A google shows they estimate the pressure at the center of the Earth to be about ## 3.6 \, \cdot ## 10^8 kPa. ).

I have just checked the question again and am sure that it is 10^8kPa. It does seem more reasonable to be 108 though.
 
relatively-uncertain said:
I have just checked the question again and am sure that it is 10^8kPa. It does seem more reasonable to be 108 though.
It is clearly a misprint then. With that correction, the problem will give a very reasonable result. ## \\ ## The gas cylinder at a pressure of 16500 kPa, meanwhile, is a reasonable number. That's somewhere between 2000 and 2500 lbs. of pressure (per square inch), and is commercially available with those numbers.
 
The first step in getting the answer right is to get the units correct and to do the arithmetic correctly. Let's see the details of your calculation for the number of moles of gas in the cylinder. Your present answer is woefully low.
 
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Chestermiller said:
The first step in getting the answer right is to get the units correct and to do the arithmetic correctly. Let's see the details of your calculation for the number of moles of gas in the cylinder. Your present answer is woefully low.
@Chestermiller The answer of ## n=172 ## moles of gas in the cylinder is approximately what I computed with a quick hand calculation. The OP needs to show his work though. Looks like he is using ## R=8.31 ## L kPa /(mole-K) , so that he doesn't need to convert any units other than the temperature, which he did correctly.
 
  • #11
Chestermiller said:
The first step in getting the answer right is to get the units correct and to do the arithmetic correctly. Let's see the details of your calculation for the number of moles of gas in the cylinder. Your present answer is woefully low.

I have calculated it from:

16,500 • 25.0= n•8.31•288
And n = 172.36

Thanks
 
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  • #12
relatively-uncertain said:
I have calculated it from:

16,500 • 25.0= n•8.31•288
And n = 172.36

Thanks
Looks OK.
 
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  • #13
Chestermiller said:
Looks OK.

Using 108 kPa, and the equations above I have got an answer of 588 , but I am not sure it is right

Here is my working:

1. Calculated the mol of helium in cylinder at 30 degrees celsius
PV=nRT
n= (16500•25) / (8.31•303)
=163.83 mol

2. Mol of helium in balloons
n=(108•6.5)/(8.31 • 303)
n=0.2788 mol

3. Divide 163.83/0.2788
= 588
 
  • #14
relatively-uncertain said:
Using 108 kPa, and the equations above I have got an answer of 588 , but I am not sure it is right

Here is my working:

1. Calculated the mol of helium in cylinder at 30 degrees celsius
PV=nRT
n= (16500•25) / (8.31•303)
=163.83 mol

2. Mol of helium in balloons
n=(108•6.5)/(8.31 • 303)
n=0.2788 mol

3. Divide 163.83/0.2788
= 588
The moles of helium in the cylinder is calculated at 15 degrees Celsius=288 K, and n=172 is correct for that. That number doesn't change. Otherwise, this looks correct.
 
  • #15
Okay - thankyou! So it would be:

127.36/ 0.2788 = 456.8
=457 balloons

I have checked the answer and it is 618. If my working out seems okay, would the answers be incorrect? (Considering that the 10^8kPa is most likely a misprint?)
Thankyou!
 
  • #16
relatively-uncertain said:
Okay - thankyou! So it would be:

127.36/ 0.2788 = 456.8
=457 balloons

I have checked the answer and it is 618. If my working out seems okay, would the answers be incorrect? (Considering that the 10^8kPa is most likely a misprint?)
Thankyou!
172.36/.2788=618. You typed it in wrong.
 
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  • #17
Charles Link said:
172.36/.2788=618. You typed it in wrong.

Oohhh! Thank you so much ! I really appreciate the help!
 
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