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6 molecules of oxygen are needed to react with 3 methane molecules as one molecule of oxygen ( O2) are needed for methane gas.
0.673 moles methane ( 6.022 X 10^23/1 mole CH4) = 4.05 X 10^23 molecules of methane
There are many, but the most common is methane (CH4).
One mole is equal to 6.022 x 1023 of anything. In this case, we are looking for molecules. So 1 mole=6.022 x 1023 molecules. We have 2.3 moles, so we want to know how many molecules are there. 2.3 mol CH4 x 6.022x1023 molecules CH4 / mol CH4 = 1.38x1024 molecules of CH4
One mole has amass of 16g.There are 6.428mol.Its mass is 102.85g
How many molecules are in 30 liters of methane (CH4) at STP
It represent a one molecule.CH4 stands for Methane
No, many do not. For example methane CH4.
6 molecules of oxygen are needed to react with 3 methane molecules as one molecule of oxygen ( O2) are needed for methane gas.
0.673 moles methane ( 6.022 X 10^23/1 mole CH4) = 4.05 X 10^23 molecules of methane
The meaning of 2 is two methane molecules.
There are many, but the most common is methane (CH4).
Methane is CH4
The volume is 17 L.
Yes; the reaction is: CH4 + 2 O2 = CO2 + 2 H2O
None. CH4 is methane. NH3 is ammonia. You have made some kind of error.
The formula for methane is CH4, showing that each molecule contains exactly 5 atoms. Therefore, the number of atoms in 0.650 ml is 5 X 0.650 X Avogadro's Number, or about 1.96 X 1024 atoms, to the justified number of significant digits.