From the Periodic Table, Argon has an atomic weight of 39.948. One mole of any element is equal to its atomic weight in grams. So 1 mole of Ar = 39.948g of Ar.
Using that equality, you do the following calculation to find the number of moles of Ar in 22g of Ar:
22g Ar X 1mol Ar/39.948g Ar = 0.55mol Ar
40 g of argon is 1 mole
So, 12.2 g will be equal to 0.31 moles
1 mole Ar = 39.948g Ar (atomic weight in grams)
2.6g Ar x (1mol Ar/39.948g Ar) = 0.065mol Ar
Mr of CO2 = 12+1+1=14
No. of moles = 22/14=1.57 moles
The mass in grams of 3.2 moles of argon is 127,8386 g.
22 grams of argon is equivalent to 0,55 moles.
2,2.10e20 atoms of argon are equal to 0,365.10e-3.
~.55 moles
55.64
number of moles=mass/molar mass =5/(28+32) =0.83 mol
first you set up your ratio; 9.3moles 1mole = 32g 9.3 is the number of moles you're trying to find 32 comes from adding the mass numbers of both elements; Si=28g H=1g, but there's four, so you multiply it by 4, hence the 32 now you crossmultiply; so multiply 9.3 by 32 you get 297.6, then divide by 1 so 9.3 moles SiH4 is 297.6g. follow the same pattern every time and you'll be fine; hope this helps
H2SO4 H= 1X2 = 2 S=32X1=32 O=16X4=64 TOTAL: 98 98x3= 294 GRAMS =))
15 moles O2 (32 grams/1 mole O2) = 480 grams
Remember the Equation Moles = mass(g) / Ar (Relative Atomic Mass) Algebraically rearranging mass(g) = moles X Ar We have 1 mole and from the Periodic Table the Atomic Mass of Sulphur is '32'. Hence substituting mass(g) = 1 moles X 32 mass = 32 g .
number of moles=mass/molar mass =5/(28+32) =0.83 mol
For this you need the atomic mass of He. Take the number of grams and divide it by the atomic mass. Multiply by one mole for units to cancel.75.0 grams He / (4.00 grams) = 18.8 moles He
There are 1.0001 moles.
Atomic mass of Sulphur is 32 1 mole = Atomic mass of sulphur No. of moles = Given mass/ Atomic mass No.of moles= 5/32 0.15 moles
# of moles = Mass÷ Formula weight Example: 6 grams of Carbon atoms Carbon has an atomic mass of 12 grams so according to the Equation # of moles = 6÷ 12 = 0.5 moles For a compound such as CO2 , Formula weight = ( 1 mole of carbon atom weighs 12 grams + 2 moles of oxygen atoms weighs 32 grams ) 44 grams. Example: 24 grams of carbon dioxide = 24÷ 44 = 0.5454 moles So for sodium, # of moles = 45.48 g ÷ 22.99g/mole = moles You divide!
The relationship between number of moles and mass is: n = m/MW Where n is the number of moles, m is the mass in grams and MW is the molecular weight (or molecular mass). Subsituting the numbers into the equation: 2.5 mol = m/32 (from O2(g), 16 from each oxygen) m = 2.5 * 32 = 80 grams This also means that there is approximately 1.5 x 1024 molecules of O2 in your sample.
first you set up your ratio; 9.3moles 1mole = 32g 9.3 is the number of moles you're trying to find 32 comes from adding the mass numbers of both elements; Si=28g H=1g, but there's four, so you multiply it by 4, hence the 32 now you crossmultiply; so multiply 9.3 by 32 you get 297.6, then divide by 1 so 9.3 moles SiH4 is 297.6g. follow the same pattern every time and you'll be fine; hope this helps
H2SO4 H= 1X2 = 2 S=32X1=32 O=16X4=64 TOTAL: 98 98x3= 294 GRAMS =))
Sulfuric acid has a molecualr weight of 98 and so 2.5 moles would weigh 245 g
C + O2 = CO2 So the theoretical number of moles are 1 each. number of moles is mass/molecular weight C = 6/12 which is 0.5 O2 = 11/32 which is 0.34375 Oxygen is the limiting reagent. So 0.34375 moles is reacted and this also gives 0.34375 moles CO2 no moles is mass over molecular mass grams is moles x molec mass 0.34375 x 44 = 15.125 grams CO2 formed. learn the technique. this is needed in science
to convert an element to moles you need to setup and equation, for our example we will be using 5g of O2 or oxygen. You need to know what O2's molar mass is as well, it is 32g. So the equation would be 5g of O2 / 32 = .16 moles of O2. So to convert moles to grams all you do is multiply the moles given by the molar mass of the element/compound and you have your grams Hoped this helped : )
15 moles O2 (32 grams/1 mole O2) = 480 grams