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The molar mass of plumbic sulfate - Pb(SO4)2 - is 399,880 11.
Yes, the molar mass of anhydrous sodium sulfate is 142,035 grams.
342
These are two different compounds.
The molar mass of ammonium sulfate is 132,14 g.
Depends on the length the light traveled through the solution and the solution concentration. molar absorption = absorbance/(length x concentration) length is typically in cm and concentration is typically in mol/L
159.61 grams per mole.
The anhydrous copper sulfate (CuSO4) has a molar mass of 159,62.
Copper(II) sulfate can fom 3 hydrates; the molar mass increase from the anhydrous salt to heptahydrate.
To get the molar mass of copper sulfate (CuSO4) Add the molar masses (atomic weight) of each element of the compound together, this will give you the molar mass of the compound. In This case 159.6086 g/mol
0.125 Molar solution! Molarity = moles of solute/Liters of solution Algebraically manipulated, Moles of copper sulfate = 2.50 Liters * 0.125 M = 0.313 moles copper sulfate needed ===========================
Calcium sulfate pentahydrate Source: Currently in chemistry and just finished covering a chapter with topics and subjects similar and equal to your question.
There are 2 forms of Copper(II) Sulphate, each with a different molar mass. * Copper(II) Sulphate Pentahydrate (CuSO4.5H20) This is the more common, blue, crystalline solid. it has a molar mass of: 249.7g mol-1 * Anhydrous Copper(II) Sulphate (CuSO4) This is less common to come across, it is a white powdery solid,and can be obtained by heating the pentahydrated form. Molar mass: 159.6g mol-1
The molar mass of plumbic sulfate - Pb(SO4)2 - is 399,880 11.
Yes, the molar mass of anhydrous sodium sulfate is 142,035 grams.
The molar mass for anhydrous barium sulfate (BaSO4) is 233.43 g/mol
342.15