Question #e5f52
2 Answers
Here's what I got.
Explanation:
In order to solve this problem, you must use the definition of partial pressure to determine the moles of each gas present in the mixture.
For a mixture of ideal gases, the partial pressure of each component is defined as the theoretical pressure that gas would exert if alone in the container.
So, in your case, the partial pressure of each of the three gases is equal to the total pressure that gas alone would exert in the same-volume container.
As a result, you can use this to determine how many moles of each gas you have by applying the ideal gas equation
#PV = nRT# .
Here
#P# is the pressure of the gas#V# is the volume it occupies#n# is the number of moles of gas#R# is the universal gas constant, usually useful as#0.082("atm" * "L")/("mol" * "K")# #T# is the absolute temperature of the gas
So,
#n_(N_2) = (P_(N_2) * V)/(R * T) = (0.32cancel("atm") * 2.5cancel("L"))/(0.082(cancel("atm") * cancel("L"))/("mol" * cancel("K")) * (273.15 + 15)cancel("K"))#
# = "0.0339 moles N"_2#
#n_("He") = (P_(He) * V)/(R * T) = (0.15cancel("atm") * 2.5cancel("L"))/(0.082(cancel("atm") * cancel("L"))/("mol" * cancel("K")) * (273.15 + 15)cancel("K"))#
# = " 0.0159 moles of He"#
#n_("Ne") = (P_(Ne) * V)/(R * T) = (0.42cancel("atm") * 2.5cancel("L"))/(0.082(cancel("atm") * cancel("L"))/("mol" * cancel("K")) * (273.15 + 15)cancel("K"))#
#= " 0.0444 moles Ne"#
Partial pressure can also be expressed using a component's mole fraction, i.e. the ratio between the number of moles of the component and the total number of moles in the mixture.
#P_("partial") = chi_i * P_("total")#
where
#chi_i = n_i/n_("total")#
The trick here is to recognize that the number of moles of each gas does not change when going from the initial container to the new one at STP. The new container will hold
STP conditions are most commonly taken as a pressure is
This means that the new partial pressures for
#P_("partial for Ne") = (0.0444 cancel("moles"))/((0.0444 + 0.0159)cancel("moles")) * "1 atm"#
#P_("partial for Ne") = "0.736 atm"#
and
#P_("partial for He") = (0.0159cancel("moles"))/((0.0444 + 0.0159)cancel("moles")) * "1 atm"#
#P_("partial for He") = "0.264 atm"#
Finally, use these values, together with those for pressure and temperature stipulated by STP, to determine the new volume.
#V_("mixture") = ((n_("He") + n_("Ne")) * R * T)/P_("total")#
#V_("mixture") = ((0.0444 +0.0159)cancel("moles") * 0.082 (cancel("atm") * "L")/(cancel("mol") * cancel("K")) * 273.15cancel("K"))/(1cancel("atm"))#
#V_"misture" = "1.4 L"#
The answer is rounded to two sig figs.
By definition, the partial pressure of a component gas in a mixture of gases is the pressure exerted by that component when that gaseous component (in unaltered amount) occupies individually the toral volume of the gas mixture at the same temperature of the gas mixture.
Following this definition we can say that pressures of different components will be equal to their respective partial pressures when the components are separately kept
So removing
(1) initially
and (2) finally under
Now by combined Boyle's and Charle's law we have the following relation
Here
Applying this formula for remaining two gases we get final volumes at
As both volumes are at
Hence
Alternative
After removal of Nitrogen
The mixture has
So
(2sigfig)