Chemistry, asked by arunkumarakay1514, 11 months ago

describe the Gay-Lussac's s law of gaseous volume?

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Answered by rakshitabhambhu8
1

Answer:

Gay Lussac's Law of Gaseous volumes. "The law of combining volumes states that, when gases react together to form other gases, and when all volumes are measured at the same temperature and pressure: The ratio between the volumes of the reactant gases and the gaseous products can be expressed in simple whole numbers."

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Answered by shobhakabra502
1

Answer:

Gay-Lussac's law states that the pressure of a given mass of gas varies directly with the absolute temperature of the gas, when the volume is kept constant.[1]

Mathematically, it can be written as: {\displaystyle {\frac {P}{T}}=k}{\displaystyle {\frac {P}{T}}=k}.

Gay-Lussac is most often recognized for the Pressure Law which established that the pressure of an enclosed gas is directly proportional to its temperature and which he was the first to formulate (c. 1808).[2] He is also sometimes credited[3][4][5] with being the first to publish convincing evidence that shows the relationship between the pressure and temperature of a fixed mass of gas kept at a constant volume.[4]

These laws are also known variously as the Pressure Law or Amontons's law and Dalton's law respectively

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