7 mol
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.
One mole of silver nitrate reacts with one mole of sodium chloride to produce one mole of silver chloride. Therefore, 7.0 mol of silver nitrate will produce 7.0 mol of silver chloride.
When 3.00 moles of iron (III) nitrate react, they will produce an equal number of moles of lithium nitrate, according to the balanced chemical equation. So, 3.00 moles of lithium nitrate will be produced.
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.
The number of moles of silver chromate formed will depend on the stoichiometry of the reaction between silver nitrate and potassium chromate. You need to know the balanced chemical equation, as well as the exact volumes and concentrations of the silver nitrate and potassium chromate solutions to calculate the number of moles of silver chromate formed.
Since both chloride anions and nitrate anions have a charge of -1, there will be the same number of moles of silver chloride produced as the moles of silver nitrate reacted. (Since both silver nitrate and silver chloride are ionic compounds, it would be preferable to call their "moles" "formula units" instead.)
Since silver chromate has a 1:1 molar ratio with silver nitrate, 4 moles of silver nitrate will produce 4 moles of silver chromate.
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.
When 3.00 moles of iron (III) nitrate react, they will produce an equal number of moles of lithium nitrate, according to the balanced chemical equation. So, 3.00 moles of lithium nitrate will be produced.
One mole of silver nitrate reacts with one mole of sodium chloride to produce one mole of silver chloride. Therefore, 7.0 mol of silver nitrate will produce 7.0 mol of silver chloride.
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.
The balanced equation for this reaction is: 2K3PO4 + 3Al(NO3)3 -> 6KNO3 + AlPO4. This indicates that 2 moles of potassium phosphate react with 2 moles of aluminum nitrate to produce 6 moles of potassium nitrate.
The number of moles of silver chromate formed will depend on the stoichiometry of the reaction between silver nitrate and potassium chromate. You need to know the balanced chemical equation, as well as the exact volumes and concentrations of the silver nitrate and potassium chromate solutions to calculate the number of moles of silver chromate formed.
To find how many grams of silver nitrate can be produced, first determine the limiting reactant. Calculate the moles of silver nitrate and calcium chloride in the given volumes and concentrations. The reactant that produces fewer moles of silver nitrate will be the limiting reactant. Then use stoichiometry to find the amount of silver nitrate that can be produced from the limiting reactant.
Well, because you have 65g of AgNO3, you have .3826 moles of silver nitrate. This is found by dividing the number of grams you have by the molar mass of silver nitrate (169.9g/mol). Once you know how many moles there are you can then multiply by Avogodro's number (6.022x1023) to obtain the number of molecules. In this case it is 2.304x1023 molecules.
6,2 moles of silver
There are 1.96 x 10^24 formula units in 3.25 moles of silver nitrate. This is calculated by multiplying Avogadro's number (6.022 x 10^23) by the number of moles of the compound.