Isnt A Mole Something You Get On Your Face?
Cmon Seriously You Cannot Expect People Who ARENT Geeks To Answer That!
Wait... I Sorta Am!
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Gotta Get Rid Of My Geekiness!
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multiply 5 with 6.02x10x23 and the answer will be 3.01x10
6. 1 mole of CS2 contains 1 mole of carbon and 2 of sulfur.
5CaSO4 has 5 moles of Sulfur or 3.011 X 10-22 Sulfur atoms
How many moles of sulphur in 1.81 X 1024 atoms of sulphur ? The answer is 3. The fact that we are talking about sulphur is immaterial. A mole is just another name for a gram molecular weight. The number of atoms in a gmw (mole) is given by Avogadro's Number, which is 6 X 1023 no matter what the element.
To find this, you simply multiply the number of moles by avogadro's number which is 6.22 X 10^23. 3.1 x 6.022x10^23 = 1.9 x 10^24 atoms of sulfur.
3,2x10e22 atoms of sulfur is equivalent to 0,053 moles.
4.2 moles of CS2 contain 8,4 moles sulfur.
6,35 moles of S contain 38,24059444195.10e23 sulfur atoms.
There are (~6.022 \times 10^{23}) atoms in one mole of sulfur. Therefore, in 3 moles of sulfur there are (~3 \times 6.022 \times 10^{23} \approx 1.807 \times 10^{24}) atoms of sulfur.
There are 6.022 x 10^23 atoms in 1 mole of any substance (Avogadro's number). Since S8 consists of 8 sulfur atoms bonded together, you would have 8 times the number of atoms in 2 moles of S8. Therefore, in 2 moles of S8, there would be 2 x 8 x Avogadro's number atoms of sulfur.
There are 2 moles of sulfur atoms in 48.096 grams of sulfur. This is calculated using the molar mass of sulfur, which is 32.06 g/mol. By dividing the given mass by the molar mass, you can find the number of moles.
To convert moles to atoms, you need to use Avogadro's number, which is 6.022 x 10^23 atoms/mol. In this case, you would multiply 3.2 moles of sulfur by Avogadro's number to get the number of atoms. So, 3.2 moles of sulfur is equal to 3.2 * 6.022 x 10^23 atoms.
multiply 5 with 6.02x10x23 and the answer will be 3.01x10
2(6.02 x 10^23) atoms
I mole of sulfur atoms is 32 g. Thus there are 300/32 moles in 300 g, i.e. 9.375 moles.
To find the number of sulfur atoms in a given mass of sulfur, you can use the following steps: Determine the number of moles of sulfur using the formula: moles = mass molar mass moles= molar mass mass Given that the molar mass of sulfur ( S S) is 32.06 g/mol and the mass ( m m) is 1.56 g: moles = 1.56 g 32.06 g/mol moles= 32.06g/mol 1.56g Once you have the moles of sulfur, you can use Avogadro's number (6.022 x 1 0 23 10 23 mol − 1 −1 ) to find the number of atoms: number of atoms = moles × Avogadro’s number number of atoms=moles×Avogadro’s number Let's calculate it: moles = 1.56 g 32.06 g/mol ≈ 0.0488 mol moles= 32.06g/mol 1.56g ≈0.0488mol number of atoms = 0.0488 mol × ( 6.022 × 1 0 23 mol − 1 ) number of atoms=0.0488mol×(6.022×10 23 mol −1 ) number of atoms ≈ 0.0488 × 6.022 × 1 0 23 number of atoms≈0.0488×6.022×10 23 number of atoms ≈ 3.0 × 1 0 22 number of atoms≈3.0×10 22 Therefore, there are approximately 3.0 × 1 0 22 3.0×10 22 sulfur atoms in 1.56 g of sulfur.
6. 1 mole of CS2 contains 1 mole of carbon and 2 of sulfur.