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Gas Laws Graded Assignment

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Last updated 8 months ago
15 questions
Boyle's Law
Required
1
Required
1
Required
1
Charles's Law
Required
1
Required
1
Required
1
Required
1
Gay-Lussac's Law
Required
1
Required
1
Required
1
Mixed Gas Law Problems
Required
1
Required
1
Required
1
Required
1
Required
1
Question 1
1.

Question 2
2.

A gas with a volume of 5 L has a pressure of 4 atm. If its volume changes to 10 L, what is the new pressure?

Question 3
3.

The pressure of a gas is 6 atm, and its volume is 3 L. If the pressure increases to 12 atm, what is the new volume?

Question 4
4.

Question 5
5.

A gas at 1 L and 300 K is heated to 600 K. What is the new volume if the pressure remains constant?

Question 6
6.

Question 7
7.

At what temperature will a 2 L gas occupy 4 L if the initial temperature is 150 K?

Question 8
8.

Question 9
9.

Question 10
10.

Question 11
11.

At a constant pressure, a gas expands from 3 L at 300 K to 6 L. What is the new temperature?

Question 12
12.

A 10 L gas at 5 atm is compressed to 2 L. What is the new pressure?

Question 13
13.

Question 14
14.

If a gas at 4 L and 1 atm changes to 8 L at constant temperature, what must the new pressure be?

Question 15
15.

A 2 L gas is at 400 K and doubles its volume without changing pressure. What is the new temperature?

What does Boyle's Law state about the relationship between pressure and volume of a gas if temperature remains constant?
Pressure and volume are directly proportional
Pressure and volume are inversely proportional
Only pressure changes while volume remains constant
What does Charles's Law state about the relationship between volume and temperature of a gas if pressure remains constant?
Volume and temperature are directly proportional
Volume and temperature are inversely proportional
Only volume changes while temperature remains constant
What does Gay-Lussac's Law state about the relationship between pressure and temperature of a gas if volume remains constant?
Pressure and temperature are directly proportional
Pressure and temperature are inversely proportional
Only pressure changes while temperature remains constant