Air contains 0.93 % Argon In a million molecules of air there would be 1,000,000 x 0.93/100 = 9300 molecules of Argon
Proust would likely state that in a sample of carbon dioxide, all molecules would contain one carbon atom and two oxygen atoms in a fixed ratio, following the law of definite proportions. Each molecule of carbon dioxide would have the same composition regardless of its source or location.
"CO2" is carbon dioxide. The three in front indicates that there are three molecules of the compound. Usually you wouldn't see 3CO2 on its own, you would just see CO2 or carbon dioxide. The only time a coefficient (the three in this case) is given is when an equation is being balanced.
There are a total of 6 atoms in 2 molecules of carbon dioxide. Each molecule of carbon dioxide contains 1 carbon atom and 2 oxygen atoms. Therefore, in 2 molecules, you would have 2 carbon atoms and 4 oxygen atoms, totaling 6 atoms.
you would get more water molecules because for every carbon particle there are 2 water molecules... hey did u get this off a science work-sheet from school? Yeah i'm doing the same question right now.
When a number is written in front of a molecule, that shows how many molecules of that substance are needed to balance the equation. For instance...N2 + 3H2 -> 2NH3which means to get two molecules of ammonia from nitrogen and hydrogen, we need one N2 molecule and three H2 molecules.
Ethane does not have any molecule of carbon dioxide. However when ethane undergoes combustion then two molecules of carbon dioxide are formed (as ethane contains two carbon atoms).
Proust would likely state that in a sample of carbon dioxide, all molecules would contain one carbon atom and two oxygen atoms in a fixed ratio, following the law of definite proportions. Each molecule of carbon dioxide would have the same composition regardless of its source or location.
"CO2" is carbon dioxide. The three in front indicates that there are three molecules of the compound. Usually you wouldn't see 3CO2 on its own, you would just see CO2 or carbon dioxide. The only time a coefficient (the three in this case) is given is when an equation is being balanced.
There are a total of 6 atoms in 2 molecules of carbon dioxide. Each molecule of carbon dioxide contains 1 carbon atom and 2 oxygen atoms. Therefore, in 2 molecules, you would have 2 carbon atoms and 4 oxygen atoms, totaling 6 atoms.
you would get more water molecules because for every carbon particle there are 2 water molecules... hey did u get this off a science work-sheet from school? Yeah i'm doing the same question right now.
When a number is written in front of a molecule, that shows how many molecules of that substance are needed to balance the equation. For instance...N2 + 3H2 -> 2NH3which means to get two molecules of ammonia from nitrogen and hydrogen, we need one N2 molecule and three H2 molecules.
No, breaking up a carbon dioxide molecule would result in the formation of separate carbon and oxygen atoms or molecules, depending on the method used. Breaking the bonds of the carbon dioxide molecule would disrupt its structure and composition, resulting in different chemical species than the original carbon dioxide molecule.
At least sixthis is because photosynthesis uses Carbon Dioxide, Water and Sunlight, to produce glucose. A glucose molecule is made of 6 carbon, 6 oxygen, and 12 hydrogen atoms. Since carbon dioxide is the only molecule in photosynthesis containing carbon atoms, and it only contains one per molecule, you would need a minimum of six molecules of it combined with six molecules of water in order to produce glucose. (with an extra 12 oxygen atoms)
To find the number of molecules in 7.30 moles of carbon dioxide, you would multiply Avogadro's number (6.022 x 10^23 molecules per mole) by the number of moles. Therefore, there are 7.30 * 6.022 x 10^23 molecules of carbon dioxide in 7.30 moles.
3
6
Twelve. Glucose is C6H12O6, so two molecules of glucose would give you: 12 carbon atoms 24 hydrogen atoms 12 oxygen atoms The 12 molecules of oxygen would give 24 oxygen atoms, for 48 total atoms of oxygen. So...each carbon atom would take two oxygen atoms to give 12 molecules of carbon dioxide, and each remaining oxygen atom would take two hydrogen atoms to give 12 molecules of water.