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Need help solving:

3.07 moles CO2 into liters? Please briefly explain to me, thank you so much! I don't just want an answer.

2007-10-18 13:41:19 · 0 answers · asked by ashley 1 in Science & Mathematics Chemistry

0 answers

It doesn't make much sense to convert moles to liter just like that. Liters meassure volume while moles meassure mass.
Still, there's a trick you can use to solve this.
IF you assume you're working with an ideal gas ( the equation is P V= n RT, P: preassure, V: volume, n= mol, R= gas constant, T: temperature), then you get that at "standard conditions" 1 mol of gas occupies around 24 liter, so 3 moles would be about 72 liters.
Of course, this is only if you assume CO2 is an ideal gas under standard conditions.
If not, your question is unsolvable without more information.

2007-10-22 13:31:43 · answer #1 · answered by Kätzchen 2 · 2 7

Moles To Liters

2016-09-30 11:51:29 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Mol To Liter

2016-12-17 03:49:01 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Moles and liters are completely independent. You may compare them to distance traveled and time--how can you go from distance to time and time to distance?
However, moles and liters are related through molar concentration: Moles /liters = molar concentration
This also can be compared to distance traveled and time are related through speed: distance /time = speed.

2007-10-19 09:09:43 · answer #4 · answered by Hahaha 7 · 2 7

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