0.9 gm
yes, one mole of cadmium is 112 grams, one mole of gold is only 2 grams.
.112 g Li Bal Eq: 6 Li + N2 - - - 2 Li3N .06 L * 1 mol N2 * 6 mol Li * 6.94 g Li / 22.4 L * 1 mol N2 * 1 mol Li = .112 g Li
Elements 89-112 are radioactive elements.
112 degrees Fahrenheit = 44.44 degrees Celsius
By definition, one mole would be the same as the molecular mass. You take the number of moles and multiply it by the molecular mass. So if you have just 1 mole, the number of grams will be the added atomic masses of the elements in the compound.Ca- 40.08Cl- 35.5CaCl- 75.6 grams
The atomic mass of Cd is 112 This means that the mass of 1 mole of Cd atoms is 112g.
You have to say which chemical you have 500 liters of. Moles are not a unit of volume, they refer to a specific number (Avogadro's number) of molecules, and different substances have different molecular sizes.
112 L = 112 000 mLTo convert from L to mL, multiply by 1000.
yes, one mole of cadmium is 112 grams, one mole of gold is only 2 grams.
1120
120 US fluid ounces = 3.54882355 liters
112/56.1056=1.996 so 2.0mole 2 moles/2 liters = 1 M
On average, oxygen (O2 which is 2 oxygen atoms) makes up about 20-21% of air. The bulk of the rest of it is Nitrogen (N2 which is 2 nitrogen atoms) (about 78%).Oxygen has a molecular weight of about 16 per atom. Nitrogen has a molecular weight of about 14 per atom. Pure Oxygen gas is thus heavier than "air."For example:Say you had a sample of air containing 8 Nitrogen atoms and 2 Oxygen atoms (80% N2, 20% O2). Based on atomic weight, it would come in at 150. (150 is calculated by multiplying the 8 nitrogen atoms by = 112, and then multiplying the 2 oxygen atoms by 16 = 32, and adding 112 and 32 together = 150).If you had the same amount of pure oxygen gas (O2), you would have 10 oxygen atoms times 16 = 160.So as a rough approximation, if the weights of oxygen gas = 160 and air = 150, air is approximately 93.75% the weigh of oxygen gas.. or in other words, "air" is approximately 6.25% lighter than pure oxygen gas.
118 atoms/elements.
112/32 moles for every mole of sulfur there are 32g
At least 112.
Liters and pounds aren't compatible. They are two different units of measurements. Therefore liters cannot be measured in pounds and vice versa.