When would you use the combined gas law as opposed to the ideal gas law?

1 Answer
Jun 30, 2018

Below:

Explanation:

The Combined Gas Law is useful when:

Given two pressures, volumes, or temperatures and asked for an unknown pressure, volume, or temp.

PV/T=PV/T

Whenever it gives you conditions for one gas, and asks for conditions of another gas, you're most likely going to use this Law.

The question may also say "at constant temperature", but will still give you two pressures or two volumes. Just rewrite the equation like so:

PV=PV

The Ideal Gas Law is a bit more advanced and deals with the kinetic molecular theory (conditions of an ideal gas).
It may explicitly say "An ideal gas" or it may give you moles. When given moles and pressure, volume, or temperature, use the Ideal Gas Law.

PV=nRT