There are 32 grams of sulfur in a mole of that element. There are also 32 grams of oxygen in one mole of oxygen as it is found in its natural state (O2).
32 grams, you can find the mass of one mole of any element by looking at its atomic mass eg chlorine has Atomic mass of 35.5 so the mass of one mole of chlorine is 35.5 grams.
32 g S * (1 mole S/32 g S) * (6.022*1023 atoms/1 mole S) = 6.022*1023 atomsThere are 6.022*1023 atoms in 32 grams of sulfur.
Use the equation; mass=moles*gramformulamass or m=n*gfm m=2*55.8 = 111.6g in two moles of Iron gfm or the molecular mass of a compound can be found by adding the Relative atomic masses of each element in the compound together. For example - Carbon dioxide CO2 The formula contains 1 Carbon atom and 2 Oxygen atoms (RAMs should be found in a datasheet/book or provided in the question. RAM = relative atomic mass) RAM Carbon = 12 RAM Oxygen = 16 gfm of CO2 = 12 + 32 = 44 or 1mole of CO2 = 44g
Potassium Sulfide - K2S2 Potassium1 SulfurPotassium = 39 grams per moleSulfur = 32 grams per moleAdd up the total mass - 2 K's and 1 S:2(39) + 1(32) = 110 grams/moleNow just make sure the units cancel so that you can multiply or divide out the mole unit3.3 mole K2S x 110 grams K2S/molemole unit cancels and you're left with 363 grams K2S
4.50 moles NO2 X (46 grams NO2) / (1 mole NO2) x (4 moles NO2) / (7 moles O2) x (1 mole O2) / (32 gm O2) = 3.70 grams O2
32 grams, you can find the mass of one mole of any element by looking at its atomic mass eg chlorine has Atomic mass of 35.5 so the mass of one mole of chlorine is 35.5 grams.
True.
The molecular weight of 1 mole of sulfur is 32 amu or grams.
320 grams
32 g S * (1 mole S/32 g S) * (6.022*1023 atoms/1 mole S) = 6.022*1023 atomsThere are 6.022*1023 atoms in 32 grams of sulfur.
There are many different ways to calculate the moles and grams of oxygen. but one mole of oxygen is always gonna equal 32 grams because its diatomic, meaning it only comes in nature as O2. so it would be the atomic mass of oxygentimes 2. 16*2= 32
0.32 kilograms is equal to 320 grams
A mole of oxygen atoms has a mass of approximately 16 grams. A mole of O2 has a mass of approximately 32 grams. A mole is 6.02 x 1023 particles and as such a mole of oxygen atoms has only half the mass of a mole of oxygen molecules.
The amount of grams in two moles depends on the element or compound that you have two moles of. For example, the molar mass of oxygen is about 16 grams. So two moles of oxygen would be about 32 grams.
Yes.Explanationary:27 g Al = 1.0 mole Al24 g = 1.5 mole O2 so this ratio (in mole) is 1:1.52Al + 3O2 --> Al2O3 so the balanced mole ratio is 2:3 or 1:1.5
15 moles O2 (32 grams/1 mole O2) = 480 grams
38 grams oxygen gas (1 mole O2/32 grams)(6.022 X 1023/1 mole O2) = 7.2 X 1023 molecules of oxygen gas -------------------------------------------------