In one mole of aluminum chloride (AlCl₃), there are three moles of chlorine atoms. This is because each formula unit of AlCl₃ contains three chlorine (Cl) atoms. Therefore, in one mole of AlCl₃, there are 3 moles × 6.022 × 10²³ (Avogadro's number) = 1.8066 × 10²⁴ chlorine atoms.
C + 2Cl2 ==> CCl4atoms of C needed = 2.00 mol Cl2 x 1 mole C/2 mole Cl2 x 6.02x10^23 atoms/mole = 6.02x10^23 atoms
NaCl is salt. 2 atoms make up NaCl, salt, and if salt was composed of more atoms it would end up, as an example, Na2Cl3, 2 sodium atoms and 3 chlorine atoms, or something.
There are 16 hydrogen atoms in 1 mole of C7H16.
0.0602 mole K x 6.02x10^23 atoms/mole = 3.62x10^22 atoms
0.0384 moles K x 6.02x10^23 atoms/mole = 2.31x10^22 atoms
602200000000000000000000 atoms or 6.022 X 10^23
Avogadro's numbers worth. I mole of anything is, 6.022 X 1023 atoms ----------------------------
There are 6.022 x 10^23 atoms of chlorine in 1.00 mol of chlorine gas, as Avogadro's number tells us that 1 mole of any substance contains that many atoms.
The answer depends on whether chlorine element or chlorine molecule is considered. 1 mole of Cl2 gas (chlorine molecule) has 6.023 x 1023 molecules or 12.046 x 1023 atoms. 1 mole of Cl element has 6.023 x 1023 atoms.
Chlorine gas is a diatomic molecule, Cl2. Two atoms per molecule. A mole contains Avogadro's Number of particles, that being (approximately) 6.02 x 1023. Hence, the number of atoms in one mole of chlorine gas is twice Avogadro's Number, or approximately 1.204 x 1024.
The amount of energy released when one mole of chloride ions is produced from one mole of chlorine atoms is the electron affinity of chlorine. This is the energy change that occurs when an electron is added to a chlorine atom to form a chloride ion.
In one mole of AlCl3, there are 3 moles of chloride ions. The molar mass of AlCl3 is 133.34 g/mol. Therefore, there are 6.022 x 10^23 chloride ions in 133.34 g of AlCl3. To find the number of chloride ions in 400 g of AlCl3, you would calculate (6.022 x 10^23) x (400 g / 133.34 g/mol) = approximately 1.8 x 10^24 chloride ions.
Since chlorine gas is a diatomic molecule (Cl2), one mole of chlorine gas contains two moles of chlorine atoms. Therefore, 6.00 moles of chlorine atoms would be equivalent to 3.00 moles of chlorine gas.
Balanced equation: 2Al + 3Cl2 -> 2AlCl3For every 3 moles of Cl2, 2 moles of AlCl3 is produced (Using the numbers in front of the compounds)Now set up a proportion: 3/2 = 0.30/?Cross Multiply: (2 X 0.30) / 3 = 0.20.2 moles of AlCl3 will be produced.
The reason for this is that one molecule of Cl2 will have 2 atoms of Cl, joined together by a bond. This means that since 1 mole is 6.022 e23 times 2 atoms/molecule =1.204 e24 Cl atoms.
Chlorine gas is Cl2If you have 4.37 x 1018 atoms, you will have half that number of chlorine molecules.4.37 x 1018 atoms of Cl x 0.5 molecules of Cl2 / atoms of Cl = 2.20 x 1018 molecules of Cl2There are 6.02 x 1023 'things' in a mole.2.20 x 1018 molecules of Cl ÷ 6.02 x 1023 molecules / mole = 3.65 x 10-6 mole of Cl2.
A mole is just a number, like a dozen, but a lot bigger. So the question is like asking "Does a box of a dozen small eggs have the same number of eggs as a box of a dozen jumbo eggs?" (Yes, they both have a dozen, 12, eggs. They both have Avogadro's number of molecules.) Trick question: a mole is a count of molecules, not atoms. A mole of water would have half again as many ATOMs as a mole of oxygen, since water comes 3 atoms to the molecule, but oxygen as O2 has 2 atoms per molecule. Similarly a dozen breakfasts of 3-egg omelets would have half again as many eggs as a dozen breakfasts of 2 fried eggs.