Mixing two or more non-reactive gases always results in a homogeneous phase. The gases mix and in the absence of any reactions, they simply diffuse together. Liquids and solids can be heterogeneous but gases are always in a homogeneous phase.
If the homogeneous mixture acts as an Ideal Gas then the volume will double to 200 kPa. That is Dalton's law of partial pressures. When gases become non-ideal, think of the van deer Waals equation, then there is a volume change upon mixing.
Let us assume the mixture acts like an ideal gas.
However in this case, adding H
2 to NH
3 causes a reaction. In fact a well established way of making ammonia is the Haber process
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haber_process: catalysts and raising the temperature helps, but they will still react under standard conditions--think of le chatelier principle.
The way to increase the production of ammonia is to maintain the hydrogen and nitrogen concentrations high and bleed off the product: ammonia. In this case we have no nitrogen present so ammonia will decompose.
Actually ammonia would not be pure in the original vessel, but rather decompose to an equilibrium mixture:
N
2 (g) + 3 H
2 (g) ⇌ 2 NH
3 (g)
However adding a lot, equal pressure, of hydrogen to ammonia will shift the equilibrium.
I will not do the calculation, but with 100 kPa of H
2 and 100 kPa of NH
3 you can find the number of moles of each, say n
H2 and n
NH3. Then we have:
N
2 (g) + 3 H
2 (g) ⇌ 2 NH
3 (g)
0 n
H2 n
NH3 equil: α n
H2 + 3α n
NH3 - 2α
So at equilibrium the total number of moles is:
n
Total = n
H2 + n
NH3+ 2α
Find the partial pressures from Dalton's Law in terms of the mole fractions:
P
i/P
Total=X
iSo using P=nRT/V,
P
Total=(n
H2 + n
NH3+ 2α)RT/V
So you can see that the total pressure of the mixture is indeed the sum of the nitrogen and ammonia pressure, except for the amount of nitrogen formed, α.
To find α use the equilibrium expression:
K
P =P
NH32/[P
H23N
NH3]
Since the equilibrium constant is quite small at, say 300 K, I would expect that α will be quite small and so likely the total final pressure will be about 200 kPa, but to be sure one needs to determine α from the equilibrium constant at the temperature given.