Gas analysis techniques Terms for gas analysis techniques Concentration The term concentration describes the amount of a substance‚ expressed as mass‚ volume‚ or number of particles in a unit volume of a solid‚ liquid‚ or gaseous substance e.g. alcohol in beer or oxygen in air. Different units are in use to describe concentration in gases: Mass concentration Concentration expressed in terms of mass of substance per unit volume [g substance/m3 gas volume] ¢ Volume concentration Concentration
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Molar Volume of a Gas – 10/27/08 Alic Albright‚ Josh Coleman‚ Dan Boden‚ Zach Babin Purpose: The pupose of this lab was to make an experimental determination of a molar volume through reaction of the substance shown: Mg(s) + 2HCl(aq) > MgCl(aq) + H(g) Introduction: In this lab‚ a magnesium ribbon and HCl are combined in a gas measuring tube. When they are combined they form magnesium chloride and Hydrogen gas. The molar ratio between Mg reacted and
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GAS LAWS Properties of Gases Gases expand into any available volume • gas molecules escape from open containers. Gases are completely miscible • once mixed they will not spontaneously separate. Gases are described in terms of T‚ P‚ V and n Volume‚ Amount and Temperature • A gas expands uniformly to fill the container in which it is placed – The volume of the container is the volume of the gas – Volume may be in liters‚ mL‚ or cm3 • The temperature of a gas must be indicated
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Citation: 12 U. Pa. J. Bus. L. 257 2009-2010 Content downloaded/printed from HeinOnline (http://heinonline.org) Fri Nov 16 01:21:16 2012 -- Your use of this HeinOnline PDF indicates your acceptance of HeinOnline’s Terms and Conditions of the license agreement available at http://heinonline.org/HOL/License -- The search text of this PDF is generated from uncorrected OCR text. -- To obtain permission to use this article beyond the scope of your HeinOnline license‚ please use: https://www.copyright
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initial volume being 0.05 m3. Calculate the work done by the fluid when it expands reversibly: a. at constant pressure to a final volume of 0.2 m3; b. according to a linear law to a final volume of 0.2 m3 and a final pressure of 2 bar; c. according to a law Pv = constant to a final volume of 0.1 m3; d. according to a law Pv3 = constant to a final volume of 0.06 m3; e. according to a law‚ P = (A/v2) – (B/v)‚ to a final volume of 0.1 m3 and a final pressure of 1 bar
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liters of gas in a piston at a pressure of 1.5 atm and compress the gas until its volume is 4.8 L‚ what will the new pressure inside the piston be? • Read the problem and determine what is given and what is unknown? • Decide which law to use. • Substitute the values (given numbers) from the problem into the equation Given: P1 = 1.5 atm Unknown or find: P2 = ? = X V1 = 5.6 L V2 = 4.8 L Note: Since this problem involves two pressures and two volumes we will
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Volume (CM3) Diameter (CM) Radius (CM) M&M’S® Thickness (CM) 1 75 108 54 0.743 2 83 120 60 0.658 Table 2 – Direct Measurement Trial M&M’S® Thickness (CM) 1 0.642 2 0.741 3 0.683 Table 3 – Calculated Averages Method Calculated Average Thickness (CM) Indirect (from Table 1) 0.701 Direct (from Table 2) 0.689 Questions: 1. When you performed Step 2 of the procedure‚ you actually made a cylinder of M&M’S®. The cylinder was rather "smushed‚" and the
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What makes a good statement (or claim)? Jose Leon HUMN 210 Professor Miriam Abbott February 24th‚ 2013 1. You are given the following ten short claims to analyze. Identify which ones are good or bad statements. If they are bad statements‚ indicate why. a. Nobody in the world today is really good. b. The world is not flat. c. I will need an extended period of laborious cogitation to assimilate the missive. d. The number 2 is
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GAS HYDRATES AND THE ENVIRONMENT POTENTIAL FUTURE FUEL FOR THE ECONOMY GAS HYDRATES AND THE ENVIRONMENT POTENTIAL FUTURE FUEL FOR THE ECONOMY Thomas Harding SEDV 601 Thomas Harding SEDV 601 Fariha Abedin‚ Nisa Choudhary‚ Romaine Mcleary Fariha Abedin‚ Nisa Choudhary‚ Romaine Mcleary Contents ABSTRACT 1 INTRODUCTION 2 DISTRIBUTION 3 WHAT ARE NATURAL GAS HYDRATES? 4 WHERE DO NATURAL GAS HYDRATES FORM? 5 POSSIBLE PRODUCTION METHOD: 6 Thermal Injection: 6 Inhibitor Injection:
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The volume of one mole of gas under conditions of room temperature and pressure Data collection and processing Quantitative data in table with units and uncertainties | Mass of Magnesium(Mg) (g) | Volume of Hydrogen (H₂) (cm³) | 1st trial | 0.040 | 39.9 | 2nd trial | 0.040 | 40.3 | 3rd trial | 0.035 | 36.5 | Quantitative data: The Magnesium was silvery-white‚ lustrous and relatively flexible before being placed in the burette. Whilst reacting with the hydrochloric acid‚ it dissolved
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