At 10°C, the gas in a cylinder has a volume of 0.250 L. The gas is allowed to expand to 0.285 L.

What must the final temperature be for the pressure to remain constant? (Hint °C + 273 = K.)

248 K

284 K

323 K

282 K

To solve this problem, we can use the ideal gas law, which states:

PV = nRT

Where:
P = pressure
V = volume
n = number of moles
R = gas constant
T = temperature

Since the pressure is constant, we can simplify the equation to:

V1/T1 = V2/T2

Where:
V1 = initial volume
T1 = initial temperature
V2 = final volume
T2 = final temperature

Plugging in the given values:

V1 = 0.250 L
T1 = 10°C + 273 = 283 K
V2 = 0.285 L

Now we can solve for T2:

0.250/283 = 0.285/T2

Cross-multiplying, we get:

0.250T2 = 0.285 * 283

0.250T2 = 80.955

T2 = 80.955/0.250

T2 ≈ 323.82

Rounding to the nearest whole number, the final temperature must be approximately 323 K.

Therefore, the correct answer is 323 K.

are you sure

Apologies for the confusion in my previous response. Let's solve the problem correctly.

By using the formula V1/T1 = V2/T2 and plugging in the given values:

V1 = 0.250 L
T1 = 10°C + 273 = 283 K
V2 = 0.285 L

We have:

0.250/283 = 0.285/T2

Cross-multiplying, we get:

0.250T2 = 0.285 * 283

0.250T2 = 80.655

Finally, solving for T2:

T2 = 80.655/0.250

T2 ≈ 322.62

Rounding to the nearest whole number, the final temperature must be approximately 323 K.

Therefore, the correct answer is 323 K.