Molar gas constant: Difference between revisions

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where ''p'' is the pressure, ''V''<sub>''m''</sub> the molar volume, and ''T'' the absolute temperature of the ideal gas.
where ''p'' is the pressure, ''V''<sub>''m''</sub> the molar volume, and ''T'' the absolute temperature of the ideal gas.
==== Notation for the gas constant ===
The gas constant defined in this article is the universal gas constant, <math>R</math>, that applies to any gas. There is also a gas-specific version of the gas constant, which can be denoted as <math>R_s</math>. The gas-specific constant is defined as <math>R_s = R/M</math> where <math>M</math> is the [[molecular weight]].
Unfortunately, many authors in the technical literature sometimes use <math>R</math> as the gas-specific constant without denoting it as such or stating that it is the gas-specific constant. This can and does lead to confusion.


==Reference==
==Reference==
<references />
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In chemistry and physics, the molar gas constant R is a physical constant with the value:[1]   8.314 472  J mol−1K−1.

The constant R is equal to the Boltzmann constant times Avogadro's constant: R = kBNA.

The constant arises in equations of state, most notably in the ideal gas law

where p is the pressure, Vm the molar volume, and T the absolute temperature of the ideal gas.

= Notation for the gas constant

The gas constant defined in this article is the universal gas constant, , that applies to any gas. There is also a gas-specific version of the gas constant, which can be denoted as . The gas-specific constant is defined as where is the molecular weight.

Unfortunately, many authors in the technical literature sometimes use as the gas-specific constant without denoting it as such or stating that it is the gas-specific constant. This can and does lead to confusion.


Reference

  1. Obtained on 16 December, 2007 from NIST