32g
To find the mass, you must first take the atomic weight of all the particles that make up the compound: Hydrogen = 1
Hydrogen = 1
Sulfur = 32
Oxygen = 16
Oxygen = 16
Oxygen = 16
Oxygen = 16
(There are two hydrogens and four oxygens)
Add it all together:
98
So that means that there are 98 grams of sulfuric acid in one mole. In two moles, it would be twice that, or 196 grams.
A mole is its relative mass in grams and 'S' (Sulfur) has a mass of 32 so 32 grams
Molecular Mass Of Sulphuric Acid Is 98
The molar mass of sulfuric acid is 98,079 g.
It would be 98 grams.
It depends how much sulphur dioxide you have. If you mean how many atoms does a sulphur dioxide molecule have the answer is 3. 1 sulphur and 2 oxygen atoms.
A mole is not a unit of weight. A mole tells you how many atoms or molecules you have of a given substance (that number being 6.023 x 1023 which is also known as Avogadro's number). So, depending upon what substance you are dealing with, the weight can vary tremendously. A mole of uranium is much heavier than a mole of hydrogen.
1/(6.02214 x 1023) = 1.66054*10-24 molesC-atoms= 1 C-atom
i believe its 28
1 mole of any substance contains 6.02x1023 representative particles. That is called Avogadro's number, and it's one of the most important constants in science. So, 3 moles of carbon would be 3 times that, which would be 18.06x1023, which simplifies to 1.806x1024 atoms.
32g
It depends how much sulphur dioxide you have. If you mean how many atoms does a sulphur dioxide molecule have the answer is 3. 1 sulphur and 2 oxygen atoms.
Not much! 2980 atoms sodium [1 mole Na/6.022 X 1023 (atoms)][22.99 grams/1 mole Na] = 1.138 X 10 -19 grams sodium ====================
Not much! 19 atoms Cu (1 mole Cu/6.022 X 1023)(63.55 grams/1 mole Cu) = 2.0 X 10-21 grams of copper ---------------------------------------
Not that much!! 4350000 atoms Carbon (1 mole C/6.022 X 10^23)(12.01 grams/1 mole C) = 8.675 X 10^-17 grams
Just about 16 grams as what you have written in you question is Avogadro's number, which is a mole of anything. Oxygen is 16 grams per mole.
a mole of deuterium weight 2,014g
3.011 x 1023 atoms of carbon will weigh about 6 grams One mole of carbon atoms weighs 12.011 grams, and there are 6.022 x 1023 atoms in a moles. So you have half as many atoms, so the mass would be half as much or 6.0055 grams to be precise.
1 mole of anything always contains 6.022*1022 things; therefore, 1 mole contains 6.022*1022 atoms.
3.017005 gm
Three atoms of oxygen are required to react with each two atoms of aluminum to form the most common product of reaction between oxygen and aluminum. Therefore, 0.75 mole of oxygen atoms will be required to react with 0.5 mole of aluminum atoms. The atomic weight of oxygen is 15.999; therefore, the mass will be (0.75)(15.999) = 12 grams of oxygen, to the maximum possibly justified number of significant digits.
15.0553*1023 Zn atomsBy definition of the 'mole' there are ALWAYS 6.02214*1023 particles (of any kind) in ONE mole of that matter. (This BIG number is called the Avogadro number or constant)So this is true for atoms Zn in 1 mole pure zinc, for H2O molecules in 1 mole water, even for sand particles in 1 mole sand (but there is not so much sand in a desert)