There are 24 moles of Carbon (C) in 2 moles of table sugar (sucrose)
If there are 2 moles of sugar. and 12 atoms of carbon per sugar molecule then there will be 24 moles of carbon atoms.
This is a chemical calculation. There are 288g of C in 2 moles of sugar.
For this you need the atomic (molecular) mass of C12H22O11. Take the number of moles and multiply it by the atomic mass. Divide by one mole for units to cancel. C12H22O11= 342 grams.105 moles C12H22O11 × (342 grams)= 35.9 grams C12H22O11
About one half mole. 6 grams carbon (1 mole C/12.01 grams) = 0.4996 moles of carbon --------------------------------- that is, 0.5 moles carbon ---------------------------------
30.0 grams carbon (1 mole C/12.01 grams) = 2.50 moles carbon ===============
The mass of 4,5 moles of carbon is 54,04815 g.
By definition, one mole would be the same as the atomic mass. You take the number of moles and multiply it by the atomic mass. So if you have just 1 mole, the number of grams will be the atomic mass. Carbon's atomic mass is 12.011 grams.
The formula for sucrose is C12H22O11. This means for every 342.30 g (1 mole) of sucrose there are 144 g of carbon (12 moles) or 42.1 g per 100 g.
# 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!
For this you need the atomic (molecular) mass of C12H22O11. Take the number of moles and multiply it by the atomic mass. Divide by one mole for units to cancel. C12H22O11= 342 grams.105 moles C12H22O11 × (342 grams)= 35.9 grams C12H22O11
Moles of carbon dioxide = grams/amu of carbon dioxide. Moles = 19g/44amu Moles of carbon dioxide = .432
85.636 grams carbon (1 mole C/12.01 grams) = 7.1304 moles of carbon ---------------------------------
About one half mole. 6 grams carbon (1 mole C/12.01 grams) = 0.4996 moles of carbon --------------------------------- that is, 0.5 moles carbon ---------------------------------
30.0 grams carbon (1 mole C/12.01 grams) = 2.50 moles carbon ===============
There are 24 moles of Carbon (C) in 2 moles of table sugar (sucrose)
The mass of 4,5 moles of carbon is 54,04815 g.
By definition, one mole would be the same as the atomic mass. You take the number of moles and multiply it by the atomic mass. So if you have just 1 mole, the number of grams will be the atomic mass. Carbon's atomic mass is 12.011 grams.
The number of grams in 20 moles of carbon is 240,22 g.
moles = weight in grams / molecular weight = 56 / 28 = 2 moles