To calculate the surface area of a solid material using nitrogen gas adsorption, we can use the Brunauer-Emmett-Teller BET theory. However, since the problem assumes monolayer coverage, we can use the simpler Langmuir isotherm model.First, we need to convert the nitrogen gas adsorption volume from cm/g to m/g:0.52 cm/g * 1 m / 1,000,000 cm = 5.2 10 m/gNext, we need to know the cross-sectional area of a nitrogen molecule. The diameter of a nitrogen molecule is approximately 0.36 nm. Therefore, the cross-sectional area A_N2 can be calculated as:A_N2 = * diameter / 2 A_N2 = * 0.36 nm / 2 A_N2 = * 0.18 nm A_N2 0.1018 nmNow, we need to convert the cross-sectional area from nm to m:0.1018 nm * 1 m / 1,000,000,000 nm = 1.018 10 mFinally, we can calculate the surface area S of the solid material using the monolayer coverage:S = adsorption volume * Avogadro's number * cross-sectional area of N2 / molecular weight of N2S = 5.2 10 m/g * 6.022 10 molecules/mol * 1.018 10 m / 28.02 g/molS 1.13 10 m/gSo, the surface area of the solid material is approximately 113 m/g.