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13 December, 20:50

A given amount of gas at 15 degrees Celsius has pressure P. What will be its temperature if the pressure becomes 3P, keeping volume constant

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  1. 13 December, 20:56
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    591°C

    Explanation:

    Ideal gas law says:

    PV = nRT

    where P is absolute pressure, V is volume, n is amount of gas in moles, R is the universal gas constant, and T is absolute temperature.

    Rearranging, we can put pressure and temperature on one side:

    P/T = nR/V

    The amount of gas and volume of gas is held constant, so:

    P/T = k

    Which means:

    P₁ / T₁ = P₂ / T₂

    Given that P₁ = P, P₂ = 3P, and T₁ = 15°C = 288 K:

    P / 288 = 3P / T₂

    T₂ = 864 K

    The new temperature is 864 K or 591°C.
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