1/(6.02214 x 1023) = 1.66054*10-24 molesC-atoms= 1 C-atom
The molar mass of nitrogen is 14.0067 g/mol
No it's not the same. Carbon monoxide is CO and carbon dioxide is CO2. Carbon monoxide comes out of car exhausts and is poisonous if breathed in. CO2 is much less dangerous, though it is also a health hazard if the concentration is high enough. There are two oxygens atoms attached to the carbon atom in carbon dioxide (thus the name). There is only one oxygen atom attached to the carbon atom.
A diamond is actually alot of carbon atoms interlinked with eachother. So a big diamond is actually only 1 molecule. Oxygen in its natural form is O2, 2 oxygen atoms linked together. So 1 mole of diamond could actually weigh as much as the earth, if the average weight of each diamond is 10 grams, while a mole of oxygen only weighs 32 grams.
A mole of hydrogen contains Avogadro's number of hydrogen atoms, while a mole of uranium contains Avogadro's number of uranium atoms. Hydrogen is a light element with a low atomic weight, while uranium is a heavy element with a high atomic weight. This means that a mole of hydrogen weighs much less than a mole of uranium.
Carbon dioxide is made up of 1 carbon atom and 2 oxygen atoms. Carbon monoxide is made up of 1 carbon atom and 1 oxygen atom. Carbon monoxide is flammable whereas carbon dioxide is used to extinguish fires.
You can have any weight of sodium you want down to 0.00000000000000000000003847 grams, the approximate weight of one sodium atom
carbon= 12.01 oxygen=16*2 12.01+32=44.01 CO2
Assuming you mean gaseous CO2. You can roughly approximate by PV=nRT, where P and T are ambient pressure and temperature and V is the volume of the Lorry. Solve for # of moles, n. (n=PV/(RT)) For weight of CO2, each mole = atomic weight of Carbon plus 2x atomic weight of Oxygen. (44.01 grams / mole)
To find the mass of 4350000 atoms of carbon, first calculate the molar mass of carbon (12.01 g/mol). Then, divide the molar mass by Avogadro's number to find the mass of one carbon atom. Finally, multiply the mass of one carbon atom by 4350000 to find the total mass of 4350000 carbon atoms.
A mole is a unit of measurement that contains a specific number (approximately 6.02 x 1023) of any given atom or molecule. Since different atoms and molecules have different weights, a mole of one substance does not weigh the same as a mole of another substance. To find out how much one mole (or 9 moles) of something weights, you have to have its chemical formula, and then look up the atomic weight of each atom in that formula, and calculate the molecular weight of the molecule you are dealing with (if it is just an atom, rather than a molecule, the process is that much simpler). Then you can determine the mass of 9 moles of that substance.
No, an atom is much smaller than a mole. An atom is the basic unit of matter, consisting of a nucleus surrounded by electrons. A mole is a unit of measurement used in chemistry to represent a large number of atoms or molecules (approximately 6.022 x 10^23 particles).
The atomic weight of sulfur is around 32.06 grams per mole.
Carbon IS an atom. I presume you mean how many electrons there are. There are 6 electrons, 6 protons and 6 neutrons in every un-bonded Carbon atom.
The proportion by number of atoms in carbon dioxide is 1:2. The atomic weight of carbon is 12.011 and the atomic weight of oxygen is 15.9994. Therefore, the proportion by mass of carbon to oxygen in carbon dioxide is 12.011/(2 X 15.9994) = 0.37536 or 37.536 %, to the justified number of significant digits.
To make 1 mole carbon dioxide it takes 2 moles of HCl and one mole of Ca-carbonate.
It weights the same as one times the molar mass in g/mol. It is NOT important to be ideal, it even needn't to be necessarily a gas, only the kind of compound is important.
The weight of an atom is primarily determined by the total number of protons and neutrons in its nucleus. Electrons, which have negligible mass, also contribute to the atom's weight but to a much smaller extent.