1) Which of the following is not a property of gases?
(a) Gases are difficult to compress.
(b) Gases exert pressure on whatever surrounds them.
(c) Gases expand to occupy whatever volume is available.
(d) Gases easily diffuse into one another.
(e) Gases are described in terms of their temperature, pressure, volume, and number of moles of gas present.
2) Which of the following is not a property of gases?
(a) Gases are easy to compress.
(b) The pressure exerted by a gas on its container is negligible.
(c) Gases expand to occupy whatever volume is available.
(d) Gases easily diffuse into one another.
(e) Gases are described in terms of their temperature, pressure, volume, and number of moles of gas present.
3) Which of the following is not a property of gases?
(a) Gases are easy to compress.
(b) Gases exert pressure on whatever surrounds them.
(c) Gases can expand to occupy a slightly larger volume than they initially occupied.
(d) Gases easily diffuse into one another.
(e) Gases are described in terms of their temperature, pressure, volume, and number of moles of gas present.
4) Which of the following is not a property of gases?
(a) Gases are easy to compress.
(b) Gases exert pressure on whatever surrounds them.
(c) Gases expand to occupy whatever volume is available.
(d) Gases easily diffuse into one another if they are of similar molecular weights.
(e) Gases are described in terms of their temperature, pressure, volume, and number of moles of gas present.
5) Which of the following is not a property of gases?
(a) Gases exert pressure on whatever surrounds them.
(b) Gases diffuse easily into one another.
(c) The volume occupied by a gas decreases when the pressure is increased if the temperature and amount are kept constant.
(d) The volume of a gas is directly proportional to the number of moles of gas present if the temperature and pressure are kept constant.
(e) Volumes of gases are added together when volumes of gases are reacted.
6) Which of the following is not a property of gases?
(a) Gases are easy to compress.
(b) Gases expand to occupy whatever volume is available.
(c) Gases are described in terms of their temperature, pressure, volume and number of moles of gas present.
(d) The volume occupied by a gas decreases when the temperature is increased if the pressure and amount are kept constant.
(e) Volumes of gases always react in the ratio of small whole numbers if the temperature and pressure are kept constant.