There are two use cases of the multiplier:
1) To balance the chemical reaction. There should be a balance in the chemical reaction to secure that the number of each element is the same in the reaction.
Notice that you can click the yellow "auto balance" warning in the products overview to let the GUI balance the reaction.
2) To compare similar reactions with different numbers of equivalent/similar reactants or products.
For the purpose of consistently comparing several reactions, it is necessary to put the reaction enthalpy on an equal footing. Therefore it might be necessary to scale reactions to be comparable (on the same energy scale).
Trivial example: doing the same simulations with twice the number of the same reactants and products one needs to scale by a factor of 2 to get the same result.
For the gas analysis: there are dedicated workflows in the workflow builder to make sure that you perform the calculations correctly for either surfaces or gas elements.
There are different classes (CrystalThermoChemistry and GasThermoChemistry) for to be used for either crystals or liquids.
For the pressure and temperature: In the analyzer, you can modify the partial pressure for each element separately (it is a simple click on each product/reactant). Everythink in the analyzer is visualized as a function of the temperature.
A tutorial in using the analyzer can be found here:
https://docs.quantumatk.com/tutorials/thermochemistry_analyzer/thermochemistry_analyzer.htmlHope that clarified your questions,
Tue