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How many moles of NH3 are produced when 1.2 mol of nitrogen reacts with hydrogen?
How many moles of NH3 are produced when 1.2 mol of nitrogen reacts with hydrogen?
1,4 moles carbon monoxide are produced.
0 moles
0.26 (mol NH4Cl / L) * 0.858 (L) = 0.2231 = 0.22 mol NH4Cl
How many moles of NH3 are produced when 1.2 mol of nitrogen reacts with hydrogen?
262.5
How many moles of NH3 are produced when 1.2 mol of nitrogen reacts with hydrogen?
The number of moles is 18.56.
1,4 moles of CO are produced.
How many moles of NH3 are produced when 1.2 mol of nitrogen reacts with hydrogen?
1,4 moles carbon monoxide are produced.
1 mole of ammonium nitrate produces one mole of nitrogen. Actually the amount (in moles) of nitrogen will depend on how much NH4NO3 you are starting with, what other reactant you are combining it with and whether or not the NH4NO3 completely reacts. Since you will never be able to retrieve all of the nitrogen (either the NH4 or the NO3 will retain some nitrogen depending upon the reaction), you can reasonably expect to get 1 mole of N2 for each 14.01 grams of Ammonium nitrate that COMPLETELY reacts.
1,075 moles of aluminium chloride are obtained.
Ther answer is none! ammonium bromide is made from hydrogen bromide and ammonia NH3 + HBr = NH4Br i mole of each makes 1mole of ammonium salt.
0 moles
0.26 (mol NH4Cl / L) * 0.858 (L) = 0.2231 = 0.22 mol NH4Cl