44 grams of CO2 (1 mol CO2 from 1 mol C if enough oxygen, air, is available)
So you're asking.. Is the volume of gas moles? In a simple answer, no it is not. Moles is yes, a unit of measurement. A mole is a unit of measurement used in chemistry to express the amounts of molecules within a substance. 1 mole is equal to = 6.0022x10^23. For example, to get one mole of CARBON You need to get 12g. (atomic mass) But some things can be interpreted as mol/L (this is the molarity of a substance)
There are 0.75 moles in it.You have to devide 12 by molecular mass
The density of the solid is about 0.86 g/cm3
C + O2 -------> CO2 12g of carbon produces 44g of carbon dioxide 1kg of carbon will produce 3-67kg of carbon dioxide
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Molecular weight of CO2 is about 44g (12g Carbon + 32g Oxygen *2 atoms Oxygen). So that means if you are presented with 44g CO2, that means there's 12g Carbon.
12g
12g
The only thing I can think of is that 32g of Oxygen is 2 mol and 12g of Carbon is 1mol so 44g of Carbon di-Oxide (CO2) would have exactly 32g of Oxygen and 12g of Carbon.
Molecular weight of CO2 is about 44g (12g Carbon + 32g Oxygen *2 atoms Oxygen). So that means if you are presented with 44g CO2, that means there's 12g Carbon.
You need to get the molecular weight of carbon. This is 12g/mol. Gram per mole is the same as microgram per micromole. So you divide micrograms by 12 to get your answer in micromoles.
The molecular weight of sodium hydroxide is 40g/mol. To get the amount of moles, you have to divide the weight by molecular mass. 12g / 40 is 0.3 moles. This is 300 millimoles.
12g-9 = 3
It is: 12g+9g = 21g
For some yes, others, no. I and most I know find it is more of a burning feeling than pain from say...a cut...