There are 24 moles of Carbon (C) in 2 moles of table sugar (sucrose)
The answer is 3,424 mol sucrose.
211g of carbon dioxide are equal to 4,794 moles.
85.636 grams carbon (1 mole C/12.01 grams) = 7.1304 moles of carbon ---------------------------------
6,1x10-3 moles of carbon 36,7350592277.1020 atoms.
0,515 g of carbon is equal to 0,043 moles.
There are 12 carbon atoms in one molecule of sugar (C12H22O11). Therefore, in 2 moles of sugar, there would be 12 * 2 * 2 = 48 moles of carbon. To convert moles to grams, you would multiply the number of moles by the molar mass of carbon (12 g/mol), so there would be 48 * 12 = 576 grams of carbon in 2 moles of sugar.
Apply the equation moles -= mass(g) / Mr Algebraically rearrange mass(g) = Moles X Mr We have 2 moles Mr(CO2) = 44 ( 12 + (2 x 16) = 44) Hence substituting mass(g) = 2moles X 44 mass = 88 grams.
The answer is 3,424 mol sucrose.
0.1 moles There is one carbon and two oxygens 1 x 0.1 = 0.1
There are twice as many oxygen atoms as carbon atoms in carbon dioxide, so 100.0 moles of carbon dioxide would contain 200.0 moles of oxygen atoms.
211g of carbon dioxide are equal to 4,794 moles.
To determine this we must first know what the molar mass of Carbon is and that equals 12.01g. This mean for every 12.01g of Carbon, we have one mole. Therefore:48gC x (1 mole C/ 12.01g C) = 3.99 molesRounded off, in 48g of Carbon there are about 4 moles.
1 gram carbon (1 mole C/12.01 grams) = 0.08 moles carbon ===============
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85.636 grams carbon (1 mole C/12.01 grams) = 7.1304 moles of carbon ---------------------------------
6,1x10-3 moles of carbon 36,7350592277.1020 atoms.
0,515 g of carbon is equal to 0,043 moles.