one mole of sulfur has a mass of 32 g --- its Atomic Mass. so just multiply by 2,4 moles
Simply multiply 3.2mol(6.022x10^23)= 1.93x10^24
The answer is 3,587 moles.
1 mol Cr/6.02x10^23 atoms x 3.6x10^24 atoms = 5.98 moles
1.81x10^24 atoms
There are 24 moles of Carbon (C) in 2 moles of table sugar (sucrose)
multiply 5 with 6.02x10x23 and the answer will be 3.01x10
For this you need the atomic mass of S. Take the number of moles and multiply it by the atomic mass. Divide by one mole for units to cancel.2.4 mole S × (32.1 grams) = 77.0 grams S
To find this, you simply multiply the number of moles by avogadro's number which is 6.22 X 10^23. 3.1 x 6.022x10^23 = 1.9 x 10^24 atoms of sulfur.
Simply multiply 3.2mol(6.022x10^23)= 1.93x10^24
There are 1.28x10^24 molecules of SF4. 2.13 mol * 6.022x10^23 molecules/mol = 1.28x10^24 molecules.
2.6*10^24
There are 24 moles of Carbon (C) in 2 moles of table sugar (sucrose)
The answer is 3,587 moles.
10 moles of oxygen atoms or 5 moles of oxygen molecules.
4,515.10e24 atoms of magnesium is equal to 7,5 moles.
2.854x10^24
The answer is 2,09 moles.