H2O is water.
One mole of water contains 2 moles of hydrogen atoms.
Therefore, 10.7 moles of water contain 21.4 moles of hydrogen atom.
Well if one mole of water = 2 moles of hydrogen and 1 mole of oxygen, than 2moles of water = 4 moles of hydrogen and 2moles of oxygen.
Oh, dude, let me break it down for you. So, in one molecule of H2O, there are two Hydrogen atoms. If you have 500.0 grams of H2O, that's like around 27 moles of water. Since each mole of water has 2 Hydrogen atoms, you've got around 54 Hydrogen atoms in that 500.0 grams of H2O.
Write out the equation first: 10H2 + 10O2 --> xH2O Since there are 2 moles of Hydrogen for every mole of Oxygen and equal moles of both are given, the Hydrogen limits the reaction as the limiting reactant. 10 moles of Hydrogen can make 10 moles of H2O with 5 moles of Oxygen left over. Think of it logically: H2 is two hydrogen atoms and water needs two hydrogen atoms, so it is a one-to-one reaction.
In one mole of water (H2O), there are 2 moles of hydrogen atoms (H) due to the formula H2O having 2 hydrogen atoms. Since 1 mole of hydrogen contains Avogadro's number of atoms (6.022 x 10^23), in a mole of water there are 2 times Avogadro's number of hydrogen atoms, which equals 1.2044 x 10^24 atoms.
2.5 moles H2O (2 moles H/1 mole H2O) = 5 moles of hydrogen
4 moles of hydrogen atoms
Each water molecule contains two hydrogen atoms. Therefore, the number of water molecules present in the sample can be calculated by dividing the number of hydrogen atoms by 2. In this case, 3.6 moles of hydrogen atoms corresponds to 1.8 moles of water molecules. This is equal to approximately 1.08 x 10^24 water molecules.
Well if one mole of water = 2 moles of hydrogen and 1 mole of oxygen, than 2moles of water = 4 moles of hydrogen and 2moles of oxygen.
2.95 mole H2O (2 moles H/1 mole H2O) = 5.90 moles hydrogen ------------------------------
1 mole of water is 18g. 36g of water is thereforeequivalent to 2 moles. 2 moles of water contains 4 moles of hydrogen and 2 moles of oxygen and so there are6 moles of atoms in 2 moles of water. 6 moles of atoms x (3.6x10^24) = 36.1x10^24 atoms
Oh, dude, let me break it down for you. So, in one molecule of H2O, there are two Hydrogen atoms. If you have 500.0 grams of H2O, that's like around 27 moles of water. Since each mole of water has 2 Hydrogen atoms, you've got around 54 Hydrogen atoms in that 500.0 grams of H2O.
Write out the equation first: 10H2 + 10O2 --> xH2O Since there are 2 moles of Hydrogen for every mole of Oxygen and equal moles of both are given, the Hydrogen limits the reaction as the limiting reactant. 10 moles of Hydrogen can make 10 moles of H2O with 5 moles of Oxygen left over. Think of it logically: H2 is two hydrogen atoms and water needs two hydrogen atoms, so it is a one-to-one reaction.
2.5 moles H2O (2 moles H/1 mole H2O) = 5 moles of hydrogen
In one mole of water (H2O), there are 2 moles of hydrogen atoms (H) due to the formula H2O having 2 hydrogen atoms. Since 1 mole of hydrogen contains Avogadro's number of atoms (6.022 x 10^23), in a mole of water there are 2 times Avogadro's number of hydrogen atoms, which equals 1.2044 x 10^24 atoms.
I was wondering about this... but I think if you combined..The four oxygen gas O2, and the two of Hydrogen gas H2.. and predict was will happened I guess this is what it will or might be calculate, but Im not sure.KKKO2O2+H2H1O4+H2O2H
5 moles H2O (1 mole O/1 mole H2O)(6.022 X 1023/1 mole O)(1 mole O atoms/6.022 X 1023)= 5 moles oxygen atoms=================( as you see this is a formal set up that you do not need to use fully as Avogadro's number is over itself as a form of one )5 moles H2O (2 moles H/1 mole H2O)6.022 X 1023/1 mole H)(1 mole H atoms/6.022 X 1023)= 10 moles hydrogen atoms====================
One mole of any substance contains 6.022x10 to the power of 23 molecules of that substance. A water molecule contains two hydrogen atoms so one molecule of water has 12.044x10 to 23 hydrogen atoms.