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A 63,60 g sample of carbon is equal to 5,296 moles.
350 g sample of CO contain 12,49 moles.
10.08 moles (there are six carbon atoms per molecule of C6H6, hence, six times the number of moles of carbon can be produced).
The atomic mass of carbon, C is 12.0Amount of C = mass of sample/molar mass = 0.170/12.0 = 0.0142mol There are 0.0142 moles of carbon in a 0.170g pure sample.
80,0 moles of CO2is equal to 3 520,8 g.
A 63,60 g sample of carbon is equal to 5,296 moles.
350 g sample of CO contain 12,49 moles.
10.08 moles (there are six carbon atoms per molecule of C6H6, hence, six times the number of moles of carbon can be produced).
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The atomic mass of carbon, C is 12.0Amount of C = mass of sample/molar mass = 0.170/12.0 = 0.0142mol There are 0.0142 moles of carbon in a 0.170g pure sample.
See the Related Question (link to the left of this answer)."How many moles of carbon dioxide are there in a 50.0 dm3 sample of the gas at a pressure of 100.0 kPa and a temperature of 50 degrees celsius?" 1.86 moles
80,0 moles of CO2is equal to 3 520,8 g.
(0.102gx1mole)/99g CuCl = 1.031x10^-3 moles
There should be about 0.117 moles of oxygen in the original sample. Is this for the mastering chemistry online quiz? for universiy?
A sample of 56,4 of magnesium is equal to 2,32 moles.
Moles of carbon dioxide = grams/amu of carbon dioxide. Moles = 19g/44amu Moles of carbon dioxide = .432
.998 moles