It depends on the process.
Like for example if the process is isothermal(temperature is constant), you can use,
PV = constant or P1V1 = P2V2 where P1V1 are initial conditions and P2V2 are final.
For adiabatic process,
PV^gamma = constant or P1V1 ^gamma = P2V2 ^gamma.
where gamma = Cp
------
Cv
Cp = specific heat at constant pressure and Cv = specific at constant volume.
Value of Gamma will be given in question.
Hope this helps!
<span>To calculate the density of a liquid, you have to first know that density is the amount of substance per unit of volume. In this specific question, density will be found with units of g/mL. Now, the density can be found by dividing the amount of liquid, 75.0g, by the volume, 62.4mL. Doing this we get: 75.0g/62.4mL= 1.2 g/mL as the density of the liquid.</span>
Answer:The lone pair of electrons takes up more space than a regular bonding pair since it it is not confined to be between two atoms, so it adds coulombic repulsion to the bonding pairs and compresses the angle. Therefore, the bond angle is less than the standard 109.5∘ . It is actually 97.7∘