Asked by Jo-ann
calculate the density of helium in a helium balloon at 21.7 degress celsius. (Assume that the pressure inside the balloon is 1.15 atm.)
Answers
Answered by
DrBob222
Why can't you use the same formula I gave you from your earlier post?
P*molar mass = density*R*T
P*molar mass = density*R*T
Answered by
Jo-ann
I don't have the molar mass just P, T, and R
Answered by
DrBob222
I thought the molar mass of He was 4.003. At least it was the last time I looked at the periodic table.
Answered by
Jo-ann
so i get 0.19026 but its wrong did i do something wrong?
Answered by
DrBob222
No, that's the correct answer. The unit is g/L. Is that the unit you are to report? I worked the problem another way and obtained the same answer. It goes like this.
density He at STP is g/L = 4.0026/22.4 L = 0.1787 g/L x (factor for T) x (factor for P).
factor for T (remembering that density = m/v). If T goes up (from 273 at STP to 294.9) v must increase; therefore, density must decrease so the factor is 273/294.9).
factor for P. If P goes up (from 1 to 1.15), v goes down and density goes up so factor is 1.15/1. Putting that together we have
0.1787 g/L x (273.2/294.9) x (1.15/1) =
0.190 g/L. One other point to check. If you reported your answer as 0.19026 g/L, that's too many significant figures and the data base would tell you it was wrong. 0.190 g/L is what you should report.
density He at STP is g/L = 4.0026/22.4 L = 0.1787 g/L x (factor for T) x (factor for P).
factor for T (remembering that density = m/v). If T goes up (from 273 at STP to 294.9) v must increase; therefore, density must decrease so the factor is 273/294.9).
factor for P. If P goes up (from 1 to 1.15), v goes down and density goes up so factor is 1.15/1. Putting that together we have
0.1787 g/L x (273.2/294.9) x (1.15/1) =
0.190 g/L. One other point to check. If you reported your answer as 0.19026 g/L, that's too many significant figures and the data base would tell you it was wrong. 0.190 g/L is what you should report.
Answered by
Jo-ann
well i have to report it in grams/mL
Answered by
Jo-ann
I got the answer i just converted it to mL thanks so much for your help i just had to look at the units it was asking me for
There are no AI answers yet. The ability to request AI answers is coming soon!
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.