JWF239
Chemical
- Jul 10, 2015
- 4
I am ordering some calibration gases to develop a method for my gas cell equipped FTIR. The gas cell is roughly 2 liters in volume and I vacuum it down to -28 in Hg. I want to run the samples at 20 psig. I have another cylinder from the company I am going to order from that says it is 34 L when it is clearly not. It says 34 L @ 70 F and 500 psig. I assume this means it was 34 L of gas at atmospheric pressure condensed to 500 psig to fit into the 1 L-ish cylinder?
Assuming that is what it means then:
I can take the -28 in Hg and convert to psi using the factor 0.49 psi = 1 in Hg. Then I can add this number to the 20 psi that I want in my gas cell to get 33.72 psig total.
So lets call it 40 psi and 2.5 L that I need to be safe. So this makes the left side of my ideal gas law 9.3046 atm*L and I will use the same temperature that they have on theirs so 70 F = 294.26 K. So using the R of 0.082057 L*atm*mol^-1*K^-1 I only need 0.3853 moles of my gas.
Again, assuming the 34 L @ 70 F and 500 psig means they pressurized 35 L of atmospheric pressure gas to 500 psig, this means their cylinder had 1.4 moles of gas in it.
Is there anything I am missing or over simplifying here? I really don't want to get the cylinders and not have enough gas.
Assuming that is what it means then:
I can take the -28 in Hg and convert to psi using the factor 0.49 psi = 1 in Hg. Then I can add this number to the 20 psi that I want in my gas cell to get 33.72 psig total.
So lets call it 40 psi and 2.5 L that I need to be safe. So this makes the left side of my ideal gas law 9.3046 atm*L and I will use the same temperature that they have on theirs so 70 F = 294.26 K. So using the R of 0.082057 L*atm*mol^-1*K^-1 I only need 0.3853 moles of my gas.
Again, assuming the 34 L @ 70 F and 500 psig means they pressurized 35 L of atmospheric pressure gas to 500 psig, this means their cylinder had 1.4 moles of gas in it.
Is there anything I am missing or over simplifying here? I really don't want to get the cylinders and not have enough gas.