Charles' Law Calculator
Calculate gas volume or temperature changes at constant pressure using Charles' Law: V₁/T₁ = V₂/T₂. Furthermore, solve for V₂, T₂, or T₁ — with Celsius-to-Kelvin conversion handled automatically. Ideal for gas behaviour problems in chemistry and physics.
How to use the Charles' Law Calculator
Choose V2 (new volume), T2 (new temperature), or T1 (initial temperature). Furthermore, enter the other three values.
Choose Celsius or Kelvin. Furthermore, Charles' law requires absolute temperature (Kelvin) — the calculator converts automatically.
Volumes in any consistent unit (L, mL, m³). Furthermore, temperatures in Celsius or Kelvin as selected.
The missing variable appears alongside the constant ratio V/T. Furthermore, V/T should be equal for both states — confirming the calculation.
Hot air balloon: heating air increases V at constant P. Tyre pressure in summer vs winter uses combined gas law. Furthermore, Charles' law applies when only T and V change.
Variants, options and when to use each
| Scenario | T₁ | V₁ | T₂ | V₂ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Heating gas from 25°C to 100°C | 298 K | 2.0 L | 373 K | 2.50 L |
| Cooling balloon | 300 K | 5.0 L | 150 K | 2.50 L |
| Finding new temp | 300 K | 4.0 L | ? | 6.0 L |
The formula explained
T₁, T₂ = initial and final absolute temperatures (Kelvin)
Note: T(K) = T(°C) + 273.15
Charles' Law states that at constant pressure, the volume of an ideal gas is directly proportional to its absolute temperature: V ∝ T. Furthermore, this means V/T = constant at constant P and n. The law fails near the liquefaction temperature and at very high pressures. Moreover, the key requirement is using Kelvin — Charles' law is linear in absolute temperature, not in Celsius.
Worked example — hot air balloon heating air from 20°C to 100°C
| Step | Calculation | Result |
|---|---|---|
| T₁ = 20°C | 20 + 273.15 | 293.15 K |
| T₂ = 100°C | 100 + 273.15 | 373.15 K |
| V₂ = V₁ × T₂/T₁ | 1000 × 373.15/293.15 | 1273 L (27.3% increase) |
What is Charles' Law?
Charles' Law states that at constant pressure, the volume of an ideal gas is directly proportional to its absolute temperature (Kelvin). Furthermore, it was discovered by Jacques Charles in 1787 and published by Gay-Lussac in 1802. The law forms one component of the ideal gas law PV = nRT — specifically the V-T relationship at constant P and n.The law requires absolute temperature (Kelvin) because volume is proportional to temperature measured from absolute zero. Moreover, at 0 K (absolute zero), an ideal gas would theoretically have zero volume. Real gases liquefy before reaching 0 K, but the linear extrapolation of volume vs temperature to zero volume gives 0 K = −273.15°C — one of the original estimates of absolute zero.
Charles' Law applies to ideal gases at constant pressure and amount. Additionally, real gases deviate from the law near condensation and at high pressure where intermolecular forces become significant.
Who uses this calculator?
Chemistry students apply Charles' law to gas behaviour problems. Furthermore, meteorologists use it to model atmospheric air parcel expansion with altitude (adiabatic lapse rate). Engineers apply it to pneumatic and HVAC systems where gas temperature changes at roughly constant pressure. Moreover, hot air balloon operators calculate envelope volume requirements from temperature differences.
Historical context and related concepts
Jacques Charles discovered the volume-temperature relationship experimentally in 1787 but did not publish. Furthermore, Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac published the law in 1802, acknowledging Charles' prior work. Amontons had earlier (1699) studied pressure-temperature relationships. Moreover, the ideal gas law PV = nRT unified Charles', Boyle's, and Avogadro's laws into a single equation by the mid-19th century.
Why Charles' Law governs hot air balloons, atmospheric physics, and engine design
Hot air balloon envelopes are designed using Charles' law — the heated air must expand enough to displace sufficient cool air mass for buoyancy. Furthermore, internal combustion engines use gas expansion (temperature increase from combustion) to do work — the power stroke directly applies Charles' (and Gay-Lussac's) law. Moreover, atmospheric temperature gradients drive weather patterns through buoyant convection governed by this law.Charles' Law in food packaging and sterilisation
Hermetically sealed food containers show volume changes with temperature — cans and flexible pouches expand when hot. Furthermore, retort processing (autoclave sterilisation of canned food) uses high temperature steam, causing internal gas expansion. Engineers calculate the pressure inside sealed containers during processing using Charles' and Boyle's combined law to ensure container integrity. Moreover, vacuum packaging loses its seal if internal gas expands excessively during transport to altitude.
Frequently asked questions
Related tools
Ideal Gas Law Calculator
PV = nRT — the complete gas law. Furthermore, Charles' law is the special case at constant P and n.
→Combined Gas Law Calculator
P₁V₁/T₁ = P₂V₂/T₂ when all three change. Moreover, Charles' law is combined gas law with P constant.
→Boiling Point Altitude Calculator
Atmospheric pressure decreases with altitude. Furthermore, boiling point changes use gas law principles.
→Significant Figures Calculator
Round gas law results appropriately. Moreover, temperature precision directly limits volume precision.
→Vapor Pressure Calculator
Vapour pressure increases with temperature. Furthermore, Charles' law and vapour pressure together describe phase behaviour.
→Scientific Notation Converter
Express very large or small gas volumes. Moreover, gas volumes at STP range from mL to m³.
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