Here is the problem:
A gas of unknown molecular mass was allowed to effuse through a small opening under constant pressure conditions. It required 113 s for 1.0 L of the gas to effuse. Under identical experimental conditions it required 31 s for 1.0 L of O2 gas to effuse. Calculate the molar mass of the unknown gas. (Remember that the faster the rate of effusion, the shorter the time required for effusion of 1.0 L; that is, rate and time are inversely proportional.)
113s/31s=sqroot(32g-mol / x)
sqroot(113s/31s)=31g-mol/x
x * 1.90923 = 32g-mol
=16.76 (Have not rounded yet)
Problem 2
Many gases are shipped in high-pressure containers. Consider a steel tank whose volume is 63.0 L and which contains O2 gas at a pressure of 1.46E4 kPa at 29.8°C.
(a) What mass of O2 does the tank contain?
PV/RT = 144.09*63.0 / .08206*302.8k = 365.33 mols O2
(b) What volume would the gas occupy at STP?
nRT/P=(.08206)(365.33)(273) / 1 atm = 8184.2615L
(c) At what temperature would the pressure in the tank equal 1.60E2 atm?
PV/nR = 1.60E2atm * 63L / 365.33mols*.08206 = 336.2k
Sorry alot to read but thanks guys. I just wasnt sure if I had the correct moles on #2 and I haven't rounded them yet.