Home
Class 11
CHEMISTRY
Pressure remaining the same, the volume ...

Pressure remaining the same, the volume of a given mass of an ideal gas increases for every degree centigrade rise in temperature by define fraction of its volume at

A

`0^@C`

B

Its critical temperature

C

Absolute zero

D

Its Boyle temperature

Text Solution

Verified by Experts

The correct Answer is:
A

`V_t = V_0 (1+ alpha_v t)`
`because (V_2 - V_1) = Delta V = V_0 alpha (t_2 - t_1)`
if `t_2 - t_1 = 1^@` then `Delta V = alpha V_0`
For every `1^@C` increase in temperature, the volume of a given mass of an ideal gas increases by a definite fraction `(1)/(273.15)` of `V_0` . Here `V_0` is volume at `0^@C` temperature.
Promotional Banner

Similar Questions

Explore conceptually related problems

Pressure remaining the constant, the volume of a given mass of an ideal gas increases for every degree centigrade rise in temperature by definite fraction of its volume at:

The raise in the temperature of a given mass of an ideal gas at constant pressure and at temperature 27^@ to double its volume is

At constant pressure, the ratio of increases in volume of an ideal gas per degree rise in kelbin temperature to its volume is

At constant volume, for a fixed number of moles of a gas, the pressure of the gas increases with the rise in temperature due to

If the pressure and the volume of certain quantity of ideal gas are halved, then its temperature