One mole of an ideal gas at standard temperature and pressure occupies 22.4 L (molar volume). What is the ratio of molar volume to the atomic volume of a mole of hydrogen? (Take the size of the hydrogen molecule to be about 1 Å). Why is this ratio so large?
Radius of hydrogen atom, r = 0.5 Å = 0.5 × m
Volume of hydrogen atom =
Now, 1 mole of hydrogen contains 6.023 × hydrogen atoms.
The volume of 1 mole of hydrogen atoms,
Molar volume of 1 mole of hydrogen atoms at STP,
Hence, the molar volume is times higher than the atomic volume. For this reason, the inter-atomic separation in hydrogen gas is much larger than the size of a hydrogen atom.
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