Did you mean 0.5 g? or mg? or ml?
Anyway, amount of substance in moles is calculated as m/Mwhere m is mass and M is molal mass.
M (H2SO4) is 1*2 + 32 + 16*4 = 98 g/mole
There are 5 moles of sulfur in 5 moles of H2SO4, as there is 1 mole of sulfur in each mole of H2SO4.
1.5 moles of Hydrogen. In every mole of H2SO4 (Sulfuric Acid) there are 2 moles of Hydrogen atoms. So, in .75 moles of Sulfuric Acid, there would be 1.5 (double the moles of sulfuric acid) moles of Hydrogen.
9.62 Mol H2SO4 ( 6.022 X 10^23/1mol H2SO4 ) = 5.79 X 10^24 molecules of H2SO4
To determine the number of moles in 1g of H2SO4, you first need to calculate the molar mass of H2SO4. The molar mass of H2SO4 is approximately 98.08 g/mol. Therefore, 1g of H2SO4 is equal to 0.0102 moles (1g / 98.08 g/mol).
2 moles of NaOH will react with 1 mole of H2SO4 based on the balanced chemical equation: 2NaOH + H2SO4 -> Na2SO4 + 2H2O.
There are 5 moles of sulfur in 5 moles of H2SO4, as there is 1 mole of sulfur in each mole of H2SO4.
1.5 moles of Hydrogen. In every mole of H2SO4 (Sulfuric Acid) there are 2 moles of Hydrogen atoms. So, in .75 moles of Sulfuric Acid, there would be 1.5 (double the moles of sulfuric acid) moles of Hydrogen.
9.62 Mol H2SO4 ( 6.022 X 10^23/1mol H2SO4 ) = 5.79 X 10^24 molecules of H2SO4
To determine the number of moles in 1g of H2SO4, you first need to calculate the molar mass of H2SO4. The molar mass of H2SO4 is approximately 98.08 g/mol. Therefore, 1g of H2SO4 is equal to 0.0102 moles (1g / 98.08 g/mol).
2 moles of NaOH will react with 1 mole of H2SO4 based on the balanced chemical equation: 2NaOH + H2SO4 -> Na2SO4 + 2H2O.
Sulfuric acid is not obtained from water.
To find the number of moles in 22.4 g of H2SO4, you need to first calculate the molar mass of H2SO4, which is 98.08 g/mol. Then you can use the formula: moles = mass/molar mass. So, moles = 22.4 g / 98.08 g/mol, which equals 0.228 moles of H2SO4.
The balanced chemical equation is: 3H2SO4 + 2Al → Al2(SO4)3 + 3H2. This shows that 3 moles of H2SO4 react with 2 moles of Al. Therefore, using a mole ratio calculation: (18 mol Al) x (3 mol H2SO4 / 2 mol Al) = 27 moles of H2SO4 will react with 18 moles of Al.
To calculate the moles of H2SO4 in a titration, you can use the formula: moles Molarity x Volume. First, determine the molarity of the H2SO4 solution. Then, measure the volume of the solution used in the titration. Multiply the molarity by the volume to find the moles of H2SO4.
To find the number of moles of H2SO4 in 100 mL of 12M H2SO4 solution, you first need to convert the volume to liters, which is 0.1 L. Then, you multiply the volume in liters by the molarity to get the moles of H2SO4. So, 0.1 L * 12 mol/L = 1.2 moles of H2SO4.
Just moles against the ratio of hydrogen atoms in compound then against Avogadro's number. Like this 0.09 moles H2SO4 (2 moles H/1 mole H2SO4)(6.022 X 10^23/1 mole H) = 1.1 X 10^23 hydrogen atoms
196 grams H2SO4 (1 mole H2SO4/98.096 grams)(6.022 X 10^23/1 mole H2SO4) = 1.20 X 10^24 molecules of sulfuric acid