Molarity is moles per litre. So you have to convert volume to a litre. i.e. 0.5x2 is a litre. so you have to do the same to moles. 5x2 is 10 moles. as this is per litre, it is a 10 molar solution.
2.00Litres is equal to 2.00dm3 Therefore, molarity = (5.00/2.00) mol/dm3 = 2.5 mol/dm3 = 2500 mol/cm3
Molarity = moles/liters
In this instance, simply divide 5.00 by 2.00
Make sure your answer has the correct number of significant figures and you'll come up with 2.50M
The molarity of the given solution is 2.5 mol/L.
Molarity is number of moles in solute. So molarity of this is 0.5mol-1.
The molarity is 0,5 M.
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The molarity of a solution given by the number of moles divided by the volume it contains. Hence, the molarity of KCl is 4.00/3.00 = 1.33 mol/L.
Molarity = moles of solute/Liters of solution 0.75 M KCl = moles KCl/2.25 Liters = 1.6875 moles KCl (74.55 grams/1 mole KCl) = 126 grams of KCl needed
Molarity is moles per litre. Therefore if you divide by 7.98 you get it as moles per litre, i.e. molar. 202/7.98 is 25.31 molar.
In a 3.4 M solution, there are 3.4 moles per liter. If you want to make 3 liters of solution, you'll need 3 liter * 3.4 moles/liter = 10.2 moles The molar mass of KCl is 39.098 g/mole K + 35.453 g/mole Cl = 74.551 g/mole KCl To get the number of grams, multiply the number of moles by the molar mass: 10.2 moles * 74.551 g/mole KCl = 760.4202 g = 0.760 kg
Molarity means moles in a litre. So here we divide by moles by 7.98 to get moles in a litre. This gives us 25.3133 molar. This figure is very high (likely to be over saturation level in water), so I'm not sure if your figures are correct.
Molarity = moles of solute/Liters of solution Molarity = 0.202 moles KCl/7.98 Liters = 0.253 M KCl solution ================
The molarity is 0,025.
Need mole KCl first. 4.88 grams KCl (1 mole KCl/74.55 grams) = 0.06546 moles KCl =======================now, Molarity = moles of solute/Liters of solution ( 423 ml = 0.423 Liters ) Molarity = 0.06546 moles KCl/0.423 Liters = 0.155 M KCl ------------------
Molarity = moles of solute/Liters of solution ( 50.0 ml = 0.05 Liters ) 0.552 M KCl = moles/.0.05 liters = 0.0276 moles of KCl
M= moles in solution/liters so plug in what you know 3.0M of KCl solution = moles in solution/ 2.0L multiply both sides by 2.0L moles solute = 1.5 moles KCl so you need 1.5 moles KCl to prepare the solution
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Molarity is moles of solute per L of solution.moles KCl = ( 1.68 M ) ( 0.121 L ) = ( 1.68 mol/L ) ( 0.121 L )moles KCl = 0.203 moles KCl
The molarity of a solution given by the number of moles divided by the volume it contains. Hence, the molarity of KCl is 4.00/3.00 = 1.33 mol/L.
Molarity = moles of solute/Liters of solution 0.75 M KCl = moles KCl/2.25 Liters = 1.6875 moles KCl (74.55 grams/1 mole KCl) = 126 grams of KCl needed
You need to bring this to a litre. If there is 1 mole in 500ml (using ratio), there will be 2 moles in a litre. So your molarity is 2.
I did not know that you could get a concentration of 75.66 M KCl, but; Molarity = moles of solute/Liters of solution 75.66 M KCl = moles KCl/1 liter = 75.66 moles of KCl 75.66 moles KCl (74.55 grams/1 mole KCl) = 5640 grams KCl that is about 13 pounds of KCl in 1 liter of solution. This is why I think there is something really wrong with this problem!
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