Doing some homework, not sure if the answers are believable, and I want to make sure I'm doing this right.
At 98 °F, water exists as a gas and a liquid with a vapor pressure of 47 torr. a) Calculate the number density and molar density of gaseous water; and b) calculate the packing fraction of gas phase water. The liquid phase has η≈0.4. Assume that a water molecule is spherical with a diameter of 3.0Å Packing fraction: η≡(volume per particle)*number of particles per unit volume.
So obviously I first converted the units. No problem there. Then I used ρ=PM/RT and n=NA*ρ/M, which gives n=(NA*P)/RT. Sub in the values and I get 1.46E21 L-1. This should be number density, yes? The number of particles per unit volume.
Then to packing fraction. η=(4π/3)*(1.5E-11 m)3*(1.46E24 m-3), which yields 2.E-8. It is dimensionless, but is the packing fraction of gas really that much smaller than the liquid?
Thanks in advance,
TG