Why do gases deviate from Boyle's law under higher temperatures?
Answers
Answered by
6
Answer:
At high temperatures, the molecules have sufficient kinetic energy to overcome intermolecular attractive forces, and the effects of nonzero molecular volume predominate. Conversely, as the temperature is lowered, the kinetic energy of the gas molecules decreases.
Explanation:
hope this helps you........ :D
mark me as brainliest plz :)
Answered by
2
Why do gases deviate from Boyle's law under higher temperatures?
At high temperatures, the molecules have sufficient kinetic energy to overcome intermolecular attractive forces, and the effects of nonzero molecular volume predominate. Conversely, as the temperature is lowered, the kinetic energy of the gas molecules decreases.
Similar questions