answer.
Ask question
Login Signup
Ask question
All categories
  • English
  • Mathematics
  • Social Studies
  • Business
  • History
  • Health
  • Geography
  • Biology
  • Physics
  • Chemistry
  • Computers and Technology
  • Arts
  • World Languages
  • Spanish
  • French
  • German
  • Advanced Placement (AP)
  • SAT
  • Medicine
  • Law
  • Engineering
JulsSmile [24]
2 years ago
6

What is the density ρh of hot air inside the balloon? assume that this density is uniform throughout the balloon. express the de

nsity in terms of th, tc, and ρc?
Chemistry
2 answers:
Tems11 [23]2 years ago
8 0

With the Ideal Gas formula.

<h2>Further Explanation </h2>

The ideal gas equation is an equation that presents the relationship between the pressure and volume of a gas with the temperature and the number of moles of the gas itself. This ideal gas equation is based on the laws of Boyle, Charles, and Avogadro.

This equation is generally written as

-PV = nRT

Boyle's Law (T = C)

Boyle's Law about the nature of gas was first created by Robert Boyle (1627¡1691). Boyle found experimentally that at a constant temperature, the pressure in a closed container would be inversely proportional to the volume of the gas. This means that if we press the gas and large volumes to small volumes, the gas pressure will rise, conversely if we expand the gas from small volumes to large volumes, the gas pressure will decrease. The process of pressing gas from large volumes to small volumes is called the compression process. While the process of changing the volume of gas from a small volume into a large volume is called the expansion process.

Gay Lussac Law (V = C)

The Gay Lussac Law was first coined by Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac (1778 - 1850) a chemist from France. Lussac's Gay Law states that under constant volume conditions, an increase in gas pressure will be directly proportional to an increase in gas temperature. This means that the gas in a closed container with a volume does not change (V0 = V1), so if the gas is heated from the initial temperature T0 to the final temperature T1 will cause the gas pressure also rises from the initial pressure (p0) to the final pressure (p1).

Charles Law (P = C)

Charles' ideal gas law is also called the law of constant pressure, first created by Jacques Alexandre Cesar Charles (1746 - 1823) a chemist from France. Charles's Law says "Under conditions of constant gas pressure, the volume of a gas will increase in proportion to the increase in temperature of the gas". This means that if we have a cylinder-piston system that can move up and down freely, then when the gas in the system is heated so that the temperature rises from T0 to T1, then to keep the gas pressure in the cylinder constant, the volume of gas will expand from the condition V0 to V1.

Learn more

 The ideal gas equation brainly.com/question/10599201

Details

Grade:  College

Subject:  Chemistry

keywords: Gas, the ideal gas.

enyata [817]2 years ago
6 0

Answer 1) : The density of the hot air inside the balloon can be found out by using ideal gas equation;


PV = nRT;


As n is number of moles and in gases, number of moles along with mass per mole is equal to the density of the gas.


If the moles in the gas are more the density will be more.


here, density (ρ) = mass (m) / volume (V); substituting in the ideal gas equation we get,

ρ = mP / RT


Answer 2) ρ (hot air) = ρ (cold air) X \frac{T_{h}}{T_{c}}

Here according to the formula because T(hot air) >T(cold air),


So, the density of hot air greater than the density of cold air.


The relationship between the ρ (h) = ρ(c) X \frac{T_{h}}{T_{c}}

You might be interested in
When potassium bromate (kbro3 ) is heated, it decomposes into potassium bromide and a gas that supports the combustion of a glow
Tom [10]

We know that the oxygen (O2) causes a glowing splint to reignite, however, let us check what is missing on the products side of the chemical equation: <span>
KBrO3 → KBr + ? 
As we see, oxygen (O2) is the element missing from the other side. Therefore the balanced chemical equation for this decomposition is as follows: </span>
<span>2KBrO3 → 2KBr + 3O2 </span>

6 0
2 years ago
Consider the following balanced redox reaction: 2CrO2-(aq) + 2H2O(l) + 6ClO-(aq) LaTeX: \longrightarrow⟶ 2CrO42-(aq) + 3Cl2(g) +
frutty [35]

Answer:

1. Chromium

2. Chlorine.

3. Chlorine.

4. Chromium.

5. 12 electrons.

Explanation:

Hello,

In this case, the given reaction with the appropriate oxidation states turns out:

2(Cr^{+3}O^{-2}_2)^-(aq) + 2H_2O(l) + 6(Cl^{+1}O^{-2})^-(aq)\longrightarrow 2(Cr^{+6}O^{-2}_4)^{2-}(aq) + 3Cl^0_2(g) + 4OH^-(aq)

In such a way, the oxidation half-reaction is written for chromium as the reducing agent so it is oxidized from +3 to +6, nonetheless, since there are two chromiums undergoing such change, 6 electrons are being transferred as shown below:

2(Cr^{+3}O^{-2}_2)^-(aq) \longrightarrow 2(Cr^{+6}O^{-2}_4)^{2-}(aq)+6e^-

On the other hand, chlorine's reduction half-reaction as the oxidizing agent result from the transfer of 6 electrons as well from +1 to 0, nonetheless, there are 6 chlorines undergoing such change:

6(Cl^{+1}O^{-2})^-+6e^-\longrightarrow 3Cl^0_2(g)

Therefore, there are 12 electrons that are being transferred, 6 for chromium and 6 for chlorine.

Best regards.

5 0
2 years ago
In a fixed cylinder are 3moles of oxygen gas at 300Kelvin and 1.25atm. What is the volume of the container?
vladimir2022 [97]

Answer:

The volume of the container is 59.112 L

Explanation:

Given that,

Number of moles of Oxygen, n = 3

Temperature of the gas, T = 300 K

Pressure of the gas, P = 1.25 atm

We need to find the volume of the container. For a gas, we know that,

PV = nRT

V is volume

R is gas constant, R =  0.0821 atm-L/mol-K

So,

V=\dfrac{nRT}{P}\\\\V=\dfrac{3\ mol\times 0.0821\ L-atm/mol-K \times 300\ K}{1.25\ atm}\\\\V=59.112\ L

So, the volume of the container is 59.112 L

6 0
2 years ago
An archeologist finds a 1.62 kg goblet that she believes to be made of pure gold. She determines that the volume of the goblet i
katovenus [111]
The  answer is

<span>The density (D) is quotient of mass (m) and volume (V):
</span>D= \frac{m}{V}
The unit is g/cm³

It is given:
m = 1.62 kg = 1620 g
V = 205 mL = 205 cm³
D = ?

Thus:
D= \frac{m}{V} = \frac{1620g}{205cm ^{3} } = 7.90 g/cm ^{3}

The density of the goblet is 7.90 g/cm³.
5 0
2 years ago
You have a mixture that contains 0.380 moles of Ne(g), 0.250 moles of He(g), and 0.500 moles CH4(g) at 400 K and 7.25 atm. What
boyakko [2]
I think it is the pacific ocean
5 0
2 years ago
Other questions:
  • A plasma membrane and a cell wall _____.
    13·2 answers
  • The atomic mass of carbon is 12.01, sodium is 22.99, and oxygen is 16.00. What is the molar mass of sodium oxalate (Na2C2O4)?
    6·1 answer
  • What is the mole fraction of potassium dichromate, K2Cr2O7, in a solution prepared from 24.42 g of potassium dichromate and 240.
    12·1 answer
  • 6. Find the number of centimeters in 1.00 x 102 yards. (1 yd = 3 ft, 1 ft = 12 in, 2.54 cm = 1
    5·1 answer
  • Two students made the Lewis dot diagrams of NH3. The diagrams are as shown.
    12·1 answer
  • When a 3.25 g sample of solid sodium hydroxide was dissolved in a calorimeter in 100.0 g of water, the temperature rose from 23.
    11·1 answer
  • Write two chemical formulae showing the steps involved when a metal combined with a radical
    9·1 answer
  • Which of these was not proposed by john dalton in 1805?
    13·1 answer
  • Compound X has a molar mass of 104.01·gmol−1 and the following composition: element mass % nitrogen 26.93% fluorine 73.07% Write
    6·2 answers
  • What is the compound name for PCl8
    5·2 answers
Add answer
Login
Not registered? Fast signup
Signup
Login Signup
Ask question!