A certain volume of a gas at 298k is heated such that its volume and pressure are now four times thier original value. What is the new temperature?

If PV increases by 16, T has increased by 4.

4(298) is really hot.

oops, T has increased by 16. THat is even hotter.

1788

To determine the new temperature of the gas after it is heated, we can use the combined gas law equation:

(P1 × V1) / T1 = (P2 × V2) / T2

Where:
P1 = initial pressure
V1 = initial volume
T1 = initial temperature
P2 = final pressure
V2 = final volume
T2 = final temperature

Let's assign variables to the given values:
P1 = initial pressure = unknown
V1 = initial volume = unknown
T1 = initial temperature = 298 K
P2 = final pressure = 4 times the initial pressure = 4P1
V2 = final volume = 4 times the initial volume = 4V1
T2 = final temperature = unknown

Substituting the given values into the combined gas law equation:

(P1 × V1) / T1 = (P2 × V2) / T2

(unknown × unknown) / 298 = (4P1 × 4V1) / T2

Simplifying the equation:

(unknown^2) / 298 = (16P1V1) / T2

We can solve this equation by using the given information, which states that the final volume and pressure are four times their original values:

(unknown^2) / 298 = (16 × unknown × unknown) / T2

Now we can simplify:

unknown^2 = (16 × unknown × unknown × T2) / 298

Cross-multiplying:

unknown^2 × 298 = 16 × unknown × unknown × T2

We can further simplify by dividing both sides by unknown × unknown:

298 = 16 × T2

Now we can isolate T2 by dividing both sides by 16:

T2 = 298 / 16

T2 ≈ 18.625

Therefore, the new temperature of the gas is approximately 18.625 K.