The ideal gas law relates the pressure and volume of a gas to the number of gas molecules and the temperature of the gas. A mole of any substance has a number of molecules equal to the number of atoms...The ideal gas law relates the pressure and volume of a gas to the number of gas molecules and the temperature of the gas. A mole of any substance has a number of molecules equal to the number of atoms in a 12-g sample of carbon-12. The number of molecules in a mole is called Avogadro’s number. The ideal gas law can also be written and solved in terms of the number of moles of gas: pV=nRT and is generally valid at temperatures well above the boiling temperature.
The ideal gas law relates the pressure and volume of a gas to the number of gas molecules and the temperature of the gas. A mole of any substance has a number of molecules equal to the number of atoms...The ideal gas law relates the pressure and volume of a gas to the number of gas molecules and the temperature of the gas. A mole of any substance has a number of molecules equal to the number of atoms in a 12-g sample of carbon-12. The number of molecules in a mole is called Avogadro’s number. The ideal gas law can also be written and solved in terms of the number of moles of gas: pV=nRT and is generally valid at temperatures well above the boiling temperature.