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A mole of gas is equal to 6.02 x 1023 gas molecules.
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1 mole of every gas has a volume 22.414 dm3 at S.T.P.
Hydrogen
No, a mole of helium gas does not have the same number of molecules as a mole of lead. This is because the number of particles in a mole is determined by Avogadro's number, which is approximately 6.022 x 10^23. Since helium is a monoatomic gas and lead is a solid with a lattice structure, the number of helium atoms in a mole is significantly larger than the number of lead atoms in a mole.
A mole of gas is equal to 6.02 x 1023 gas molecules.
There would be 6.022 x 1023 gas paricles in one mole of that gas.
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1 mole of gas at STP occupies 22.4 liters.
The Universal Gas Constant is 8.314 J/K/Mole
one mole of a substance is described as 6.02x1023 atoms of a substance so if one mole of bromide gas contains 6.02x1023 atoms then bromide gas will contain one mole. your question is a trick question as the gas is stated as containg one mole there fore it contains one mole of bromide atoms
1 mole of gas = 22.7 litre ( at STP) 22.7 Litre of gas = 1 mole 1 litre of gas = 2.27 litre of gas = mole www.examville.com
1 mole of 02 gas has 12,044 281 714.1023 atoms.
The Universal Gas Constant is 8.314 J/K/Mole
A mole of ideal gas at STP takes up 22.4 L.
mole is the unit of gas. Kilogram is the unit of Solid Mole is related to Avegatro No 6.623*10^23
There is one critical piece of information missing in the question, i.e. which gas are we talking about since different gas will have different molecular weight. In addition 1 mole of gas occupies volume of 22.4 dm3 at stp. This is equivalent to 22.4 L or 0.0224 m3 per mole of gas. Assuming the molecular weight of the gas Y is x g/mole, then the general solution is as followed: 2263000 tons of gas Y equal 226300*1016*1000g/(x g/mole)*(0.0224 m3/mole) equal 5.15022592e9/x m3 of gas Y