In one mole of each element there is... Fe - 56g
O - 16g
S - 32g
Th equation is Fe2(SO4)3
56g x 2 = 112g
32g x 3 = 96g
16g x 12 = 192g
112g + 96g + 192g = 400g
400g
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
It is the same. 1 mole is always 23 6.022x10 from wikipedia under "Mole (unit)", "one mole of iron contains the same number of atoms as one mole of gold;" It is the same. 1 mole is always 6.022 x (10 to the 23rd) from wikipedia under "Mole (unit)", "one mole of iron contains the same number of atoms as one mole of gold;"
HI, A MOLE IS MOLECULAR MASS. MOLECULAR MASS OF SODIUM IS 23. HENCE, 1.22 MOLE = 1.22*23 = 28.60
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.
By definition, one mole would be the same as the atomic mass. You take the number of moles and multiply it by the atomic mass (divide by one mole for units to cancel). So if you have just 1 mole, the number of grams will just be the atomic mass. Sulfur's atomic mass is 32.064 grams.
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
6.02 x 10^23 is the number of atoms in one mole of iron
Iron sulphate is a compound because it contains more than one element (three in this instance) in fixed ratios by mass to one another. There are at least two kinds of iron sulphate, those of iron(II) and iron(III). These have the same mass ratio between sulfur and oxygen, but the ratios of these two elements to iron are different in these two compounds.
chicken nuggets
The right question should be: Does one mole of iron weigh the same as one mole of iron oxide? The answer is NO, Iron Oxide weighs more.
One mole of gold has a greater mass than one mole of silver because gold has a higher atomic mass compared to silver. The atomic mass of gold is around 197 grams per mole, whereas the atomic mass of silver is around 108 grams per mole.
One mole of iron contains 6.022 x 10^23 iron atoms. Each iron atom consists of a single iron molecule, so one mole of iron contains the same number of iron molecules, which is 6.022 x 10^23 molecules.
Iron (II) sulphate has the formula FeSO4. The sulphate ion has a 2- charge, and the iron (II) ion has a 2+ charge, so only one of each ion is needed to form a neutral iron (II) sulphate compound.
one example is zinc+iron sulphate= iron+ zinc sulphate
It depends on the substance. A mole is just a unit of amount, 6.02 × 1023. So that means that one mole of atoms is 6.02 × 1023 atoms; likewise, one mole of cars is 6.02 × 1023 cars and one mole of rice is 6.02 × 1023 grains. A mole of cars has a different mass than a mole of rice, so until you define what you're measuring, this question cannot be answered.
This is the third element Lithium: 6.94 g is the mass of 1 mole Li. The mass in grams of one mole of any element is exactly its atomic mass (in a.m.u.)
Gold