If 11.0g of a gas occupies 5.6 dm3 at s.t.p., calculate its vapour density (1 mole of a gas occupies 22.4 dm3).
Answer Details
The problem requires calculating the **vapor density** of the gas. Vapor density is defined as the mass of a certain volume of a gas compared to the mass of an equal volume of hydrogen, where the hydrogen standard is 2 g/mol (as the molecular weight of hydrogen gas, Hâ‚‚, is 2).
Here's a step-by-step explanation:
Molar Volume: At standard temperature and pressure (s.t.p.), 1 mole of any gas occupies a volume of 22.4 dm3.
Volume of Gas Provided: The given gas occupies a volume of 5.6 dm3.
Find Moles of Gas: Using the proportion of the molar volume:
Moles of Gas = Volume of Gas Provided / Molar Volume
Moles of Gas = 5.6 dm3 / 22.4 dm3/mole = 0.25 moles
Calculate Molecular Weight: Molecular weight (M) can be calculated using the relation:
M = Mass of Gas / Moles of Gas
M = 11.0 g / 0.25 moles = 44 g/mol
Vapor Density: Vapor density is half of the molecular weight of the gas.