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26 August, 08:43

In a student experiment, a constant-volume gas thermometer is calibrated in dry ice (278.58c) and in boiling ethyl alcohol (78.08c). the separate pressures are 0.900 atm and 1.635 atm. (a) what value of absolute zero in degrees celsius does the calibration yield

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  1. 26 August, 11:38
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    The temperature is calibrated using dry ice and ethanol and the temperatures should actually be listed as:

    dry ice, T = - 78.5 °C, P = 0.900 atm

    ethanol, T = 78 °C, P = 1.635 atm

    We can use the formula P = A + BT where A and B are constants we can solve for:

    0.900 atm = A + B (-78.5)

    A = 0.900 + 78.5B

    1.635 = A + B (78)

    A = 1.635 - 78B

    1.635 - 78B = 0.900 + 78.5B

    156.5B = 0.735

    B = 0.004696

    A = 1.635 - 78 (0.004696)

    A = 1.269

    We have values for A and B, and we also know that at absolute zero, the pressure is equal to zero. Therefore, we can solve for the temperature at absolute zero using the calibrated values of A and B:

    P = A + BT

    0 = 1.269 + (0.004696) T

    0.004696T = - 1.269

    T = (-1.269/0.004696)

    T = - 270.2 °C

    The calibrated temperature provides a value of absolute zero as - 270.2 °C when we know the true value is - 273.15 °C.
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