The answer depends on the pressure under which the gas is stored.
To determine the number of moles of SO2 in 0.45 grams of sulfur dioxide, you need to use the molar mass of SO2. The molar mass of SO2 is about 64.06 g/mol. Divide the given mass by the molar mass to find the number of moles. In this case, 0.45 grams divided by 64.06 g/mol gives you approximately 0.007 moles of SO2.
To find the number of moles in 3.82 g of SO2, you need to use the molar mass of SO2. The molar mass of SO2 is 64.07 g/mol. So, 3.82 g of SO2 is equal to 3.82/64.07 ≈ 0.06 moles.
1.75 moles SO2 x 6.02x10^23 molecules SO2/mole SO2 = 1.05x10^24 molecules
Yahoo it Google it
32 g SO2 x 1 mole SO2/96 g x 6.02x10^23 molecules/mole = 2.0x10^23 molecules
How many moles of C are needed to react with 0.490 mole SO2?
S + o2 = so2
The formula mass of the compound sulfur dioxide, SO2 is 32.1 + 2(16.0) = 64.1Amount of SO2 = mass of pure sample/molar mass = 37.4/64.1 = 0.583mol There are 0.583 moles of sulfur dioxide in a 37.4g pure sample.
If 3 moles of SO2 reacts, then 3 moles of CS2 will form since the reaction ratio between SO2 and CS2 in the reaction is 1:1.
SO2 is Sulfur Dioxide
SO2 is the chemical formula of sulfur dioxide; but SO2 is an inorganic compound.
Fuel goes in the car's cylinder, and when the fuel goes in the cylinder it causes a device to to lower. Then the fuel explodes, and when this device comes up, it pushes the CO2 and SO2 out of the car. The system then restarts again and again.