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Boyle - S Charles - Gay-Lussac and Combined Gas Law Worksheet

This document provides example problems applying Boyle's law, Charles' law, Gay-Lussac's law, and the combined gas law. Boyle's law relates the inverse relationship between pressure and volume of a gas at constant temperature. Charles' law relates the direct relationship between volume and temperature of a gas at constant pressure. Gay-Lussac's law relates the direct relationship between pressure and temperature of a gas at constant volume. The combined gas law incorporates all three by relating pressure, volume, and temperature. The document contains 5 example problems for each gas law.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
168 views2 pages

Boyle - S Charles - Gay-Lussac and Combined Gas Law Worksheet

This document provides example problems applying Boyle's law, Charles' law, Gay-Lussac's law, and the combined gas law. Boyle's law relates the inverse relationship between pressure and volume of a gas at constant temperature. Charles' law relates the direct relationship between volume and temperature of a gas at constant pressure. Gay-Lussac's law relates the direct relationship between pressure and temperature of a gas at constant volume. The combined gas law incorporates all three by relating pressure, volume, and temperature. The document contains 5 example problems for each gas law.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Name: Period:_______

Boyle’s Law P1 x V1 = P2 x V2
1. Convert 350.0 mL at 740.0 mm of Hg to its new volume at standard pressure.

2. If a gas at 25.0 °C occupies 3.60 liters at a pressure of 1.00 atm, what will be its volume at 2.50 atm?

3. A gas occupies 11.2 liters at 98 kPa. What is the pressure if the volume becomes 15.0 L?

4. *500.0mL of a gas is collected at 745.0 mmHg. What will the new pressure be if the volume is now 1.25L?

5. *A gas occupies 25.3 mL at a pressure of 152 kPa. Find the volume if the pressure is reduced to 0.804 atm.

Charles’s Law V1 / T1 = V2 / T2
1. Calculate the decrease in temperature when 2.00 L at 293 K is compressed to 1.00 L.

2. What change in volume results if 60.0 mL of gas is cooled from 33.0 °C to 5.00 °C?

3. Given 300.0 mL of a gas at 270 K. What is its volume at 453 K?

4. A gas occupies 1.00 L at standard temperature. What is the volume at 333.0 °C?

5. 3.50 liters of a gas at 727.0 K will occupy how many liters at 153.0 K?
Gay-Lussac’s Law P1 / T1 = P2 / T2
1. Find the pressure change when a constant volume of gas at 1.00 atm is heated from 20.0 °C to 30.0 °C.

2. A gas has a pressure of 0.370 atm at 50.0 °C. What is the pressure at standard temperature?

3. A gas has a pressure of 699.0 mm Hg at 40.0 °C. What is the temperature at standard pressure?

4. A gas cools from 323.0 K to 273.15 K and the volume is kept constant what final pressure would result if
the original pressure was 750.0 mm Hg?

5. If a gas in a closed container is pressurized from 15.0 atmospheres to 16.0 atmospheres and its original
temperature was 25.0 °C, what would the final temperature of the gas be?

Combined Gas Law (P1 x V1) / T1 = (P2 x V2) / T2


1. What is the final volume of a 400.0 mL gas sample that is subjected to a temperature change from 22.0 °C
to 30.0 °C and a pressure change from 760.0 mm Hg to 360.0 mm Hg?

2. If 10.0 liters of oxygen are at STP, what will the new temperature of the gas be if the pressure is increased to
1520.0 mm of mercury and the new volume is 5.0 liters?

3. What is the volume at STP of 720.0 mL of a gas collected at 293 K and 3.00 atm pressure?

4. 500.0 mL of a gas was collected at 20.0 °C and 720.0 mm Hg. What is its volume at STP?

5. A sample of gas occupies 50.0 L at 280 K and 640.0 mm Hg pressure. What is the volume at STP?

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