300 (mL) * 1.5 (mol/L) * 1 (L) / 1000 (mL) = 0.45 mol
115*0.652/1000 = 0.0750 mol
There would be 0.75 moles in 1 liter of solution. You have 100 mL which is in fact 0.1 liters. so you would have 0.1 of 0.75 moles. 0.1 x 0.75 = 0.075 moles.
This is a chemical calculation. there are 3.267 moles in this solution.
moles KCl = ( M solution ) ( V solution in L )moles KCl = ( 2.2 mol KCl / L solution ) ( 0.635 L of solution )moles KCl = 1.397 moles KCl
moles KCL = ( M solution ) ( L of solution )moles KCl = ( 0.83 mol KCl / L ) ( 1.7 L ) = 1.41 moles KCl
115*0.652/1000 = 0.0750 mol
There would be 0.75 moles in 1 liter of solution. You have 100 mL which is in fact 0.1 liters. so you would have 0.1 of 0.75 moles. 0.1 x 0.75 = 0.075 moles.
8 moles
This is a chemical calculation. there are 3.267 moles in this solution.
moles KCl = ( M solution ) ( V solution in L )moles KCl = ( 2.2 mol KCl / L solution ) ( 0.635 L of solution )moles KCl = 1.397 moles KCl
0,288 moles
It depends on how many moles you would like. 0.2M is a ratio which states that you have 0.2 moles per liter of solution.
Ten milliliters is a hundredth of a liter. So in a two molar solution, you would have .02 moles in 10 ml.
moles KCL = ( M solution ) ( L of solution )moles KCl = ( 0.83 mol KCl / L ) ( 1.7 L ) = 1.41 moles KCl
599.6
The solution is 0,25 M.
Depends on the concentration of the solution and what is in it.