Gas Volume Calculations (OCR Gateway GCSE Chemistry)

Revision Note

Test yourself
Jennifer

Author

Jennifer

Last updated

Gas Volume Calculations

Avogadro's Law

  • Avogadro’s Law states that at the same conditions of temperature and pressure, equal amounts of gases occupy the same volume of space
  • At room temperature and pressure, the volume occupied by one mole of any gas was found to be 24 dm3 or 24,000 cm3
  • This is known as the molar gas volume at RTP
  • RTP stands for “room temperature and pressure” and the conditions are 20ºC and 1 atmosphere (atm), which is a standard room temperature at an altitude of sea level.
  • From the molar gas volume the following formula triangle can be derived:

Molar Volume dm3 (decimetre) Formula Triangle, IGCSE & GCSE Chemistry revision notes

Formula triangle showing the relationship between moles of gas, volume in dm3 and the molar volume

  • If the volume is given in cm3 instead of dm3, then divide by 24,000 instead of 24:

Molar Volume cm3 Formula Triangle, IGCSE & GCSE Chemistry revision notes

Formula triangle showing the relationship between moles of gas, volume in cmand the molar volume

  • The formula can be used to calculate the number of moles of gases from a given volume or vice versa
  • Simply cover the one you want and the triangle tells you what to do

To find the volume

Volume = Moles x Molar Volume

Table showing the Conversion of Moles of Gas to Volumes of Gas

Examples of Converting Moles into Volumes Table, downloadable IGCSE & GCSE Chemistry revision notes

To find the moles

Moles = Volume ÷ Molar Volume

Table showing the Conversion of Volume of Gas to Moles of Gas

Examples of Converting Volumes into Moles Table, downloadable IGCSE & GCSE Chemistry revision notes

Calculations Involving Reacting Gases

  • You may be asked to calculate the volume of a gas from a given amount stated in grams instead of moles
  • To answer these type of questions you must first convert grams to moles and then calculate the volume.

Worked example

Example 1

What is the volume of 154 g of nitrogen (N2) gas at RTP?

Answer

Gas Volumes from Masses WE1, downloadable IGCSE & GCSE Chemistry revision notes

  • A second style of gas calculation involves calculating the volumes of gaseous reactants and products from a balanced equation and a given volume of a gaseous reactant or product
  • These problems are straightforward as you are applying Avogadro's Law, so the moles ( and coefficients) in equations are in the as the same ratio as the gas volumes
    • For example, in a reaction where one mole of O2 is reacted with carbon to produce one mole of CO2, then the volume of oxygen used will always equal the volume of carbon dioxide produced, since one oxygen molecules produces one carbon dioxide molecule

Worked example

Example 2

The complete combustion of propane gives carbon dioxide and water vapour as the products:

C3H8 (g) + 5O2 (g) → 3CO2 (g) + 4H2O (g)

Determine the volume of oxygen needed to react with 150 cm3 of propane and the total volume of the gaseous products.

Answer

    • The balanced equation shows that 5 moles of oxygen are needed to completely react with 1 mole of propane, so the reaction will need five times the volume of oxygen as it has of propane
    • Therefore, the volume of oxygen needed would be = 5 moles x 150 cm3 = 750 cm3
    • The total number of moles of gaseous products is = 3 + 4 = 7 moles
    • The total volume of gaseous products would be = 7 moles x 150 cm3 = 1050 cm3

Examiner Tip

Make sure you use the correct units as asked by the question when working through reacting gas volume questions.

The standard unit for volume is dm3 and the molar gas volume is given to you in the exam question with the required unit, so just check before you start your calculation.

You've read 0 of your 5 free revision notes this week

Sign up now. It’s free!

Join the 100,000+ Students that ❤️ Save My Exams

the (exam) results speak for themselves:

Did this page help you?

Jennifer

Author: Jennifer

Expertise: Chemistry

Jenny graduated in 'Chemistry for Drug Discovery' from the University of Bath in 2006, followed by her PGCE in secondary science, and has been teaching chemistry to 11-18 year olds ever since. She has taught GCSE and A-level chemistry for over 16 years and been a Director of Science for over 6 years, as well as tutoring and writing science books. Jenny loves helping students to understand the core concepts in chemistry and the links between topics, so is now happily working at Save My Exams to support more students to succeed in their learning.