Chemistry, asked by Diyvay355, 2 months ago

Explore Charle's law​

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Answered by Anonymous
18

Charle's law:  It states that the volume of a gas at constant pressure is directly proportional to the absolute temperature (in Kelvin). Such that, V/T = constant.

For a gas having initial values of Temperature and volume \rm{T_1} and \rm{V_1}, and if the temperature is changed to \rm{T_2} such that the volume becomes \rm{V_2} then,

\qquad \rm{\dfrac{V_1}{T_1} = \dfrac{V_2}{T_2}}

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Answered by TheRose06
5

\huge\underline{\bf \orange{AnSweR :}}

  • The physical principle known as Charles' law states that the volume of a gas equals a constant value multiplied by its temperature as measured on the Kelvin scale (zero Kelvin corresponds to -273.15 degrees Celsius).

  • The law's name honors the pioneer balloonist Jacques Charles, who in 1787 did experiments on how the volume of gases depended on temperature. The irony is that Charles never published the work for which he is remembered, nor was he the first or last to make this discovery.

  • In fact, Guillaume Amontons had done the same sorts of experiments 100 years earlier, and it was Joseph Gay-Lussac in 1808 who made definitive measurements and published results showing that every gas he tested obeyed this generalization.
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