The Atomic Mass of the element silver, Ag is 108Amount of Ag = mass of sample/molar mass = 108/108 = 1.00
So, there is 1.00mol of silver in a 108g pure sample.
1 mole of silver nitrate produces 1 mole of silver when it reacts to completion. Therefore, 7 moles of silver nitrate will produce 7 moles of silver.
If the reaction is stoichiometric, 1.30 moles of zinc will generate an equal number of moles of silver. This is based on the balanced chemical equation for the reaction between zinc and silver nitrate.
1 mole of silver nitrate produces 1 mole of silver chloride in a 1:1 ratio according to the balanced chemical equation AgNO3 + NaCl -> AgCl + NaNO3. Therefore, 7 moles of silver nitrate will produce 7 moles of silver chloride.
To find the number of moles, we first need to calculate the molar mass of silver (Ag) which is 107.87 g/mol. Next, convert the mass of silver from kilograms to grams (7000g). Finally, divide the mass by the molar mass to find the number of moles, which results in 65.00 moles of silver.
There are 2.26 x 10^24 silver atoms in 3.75 moles of silver. This is calculated by multiplying Avogadro's number (6.022 x 10^23 atoms/mole) by the number of moles.
2,5 moles of silver is equal to 269,6705 g.
1 mole of silver nitrate produces 1 mole of silver when it reacts to completion. Therefore, 7 moles of silver nitrate will produce 7 moles of silver.
4,35 moles of silver is equal to 469 g (0,469 kg).
6,2 moles of silver
If the reaction is stoichiometric, 1.30 moles of zinc will generate an equal number of moles of silver. This is based on the balanced chemical equation for the reaction between zinc and silver nitrate.
2.26*1024
To calculate the number of moles, we need to use the molar mass of silver, which is 107.87 g/mol. Divide the given mass by the molar mass to get the number of moles. Therefore, 129 g of silver is equal to approximately 1.2 moles of silver.
Since silver chromate has a 1:1 molar ratio with silver nitrate, 4 moles of silver nitrate will produce 4 moles of silver chromate.
108g is 0.238 pound.
1 mole of silver nitrate produces 1 mole of silver chloride in a 1:1 ratio according to the balanced chemical equation AgNO3 + NaCl -> AgCl + NaNO3. Therefore, 7 moles of silver nitrate will produce 7 moles of silver chloride.
The number of moles is 0,19.
To find the number of moles, we first need to calculate the molar mass of silver (Ag) which is 107.87 g/mol. Next, convert the mass of silver from kilograms to grams (7000g). Finally, divide the mass by the molar mass to find the number of moles, which results in 65.00 moles of silver.