621.35 grams is the mass given by wiki. So, since diamonds are mostly pure carbon.............
621.35 grams C (1 mole C/12.01 grams)
= 51.736 moles of carbon
The Cullinan diamond contains about 6.35 moles of carbon, based on its molar mass of approximately 12.01 g/mol and its known mass.
450 moles of C2H4 contain 10.815,43 g carbon.
350 g sample of CO contain 12,49 moles.
Diamonds are all carbon. just divide 1200 grams by 12.01 grams per mole carbon.
To calculate the moles of carbon dioxide, we first need to determine the number of moles of oxygen in 16g. Using oxygen's molar mass of 16 g/mol, we find that there is 1 mole of oxygen in 16g. Since one mole of oxygen reacts with one mole of carbon dioxide in the balanced equation, there will also be 1 mole of carbon dioxide formed.
The Cullinan diamond contains about 6.35 moles of carbon, based on its molar mass of approximately 12.01 g/mol and its known mass.
450 moles of C2H4 contain 10.815,43 g carbon.
To find the number of moles of carbon in a 1.50-carat diamond, first convert carats to grams: 1.50 carats * 0.200 g/carat = 0.30 g. Then, calculate the number of moles using the molar mass of carbon (12.01 g/mol): 0.30 g / 12.01 g/mol ≈ 0.025 moles of carbon.
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.
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350 g sample of CO contain 12,49 moles.
Diamonds are all carbon. just divide 1200 grams by 12.01 grams per mole carbon.
2.6 moles C9H8O4 (9 moles C/1 mole C9H8O4)(6.022 X 10^23/ 1mole C) = 1.4 X 10^25 atoms of carbon
0.1 moles There is one carbon and two oxygens 1 x 0.1 = 0.1
To calculate the moles of carbon dioxide, we first need to determine the number of moles of oxygen in 16g. Using oxygen's molar mass of 16 g/mol, we find that there is 1 mole of oxygen in 16g. Since one mole of oxygen reacts with one mole of carbon dioxide in the balanced equation, there will also be 1 mole of carbon dioxide formed.
Quinine is a compound made up of several elements, including carbon. To determine the exact number of moles of carbon in quinine, you would need to know the molecular formula of quinine, count the number of carbon atoms in the formula, and then calculate the moles using Avogadro's number and the molar mass of carbon.
There are 24 moles of Carbon (C) in 2 moles of table sugar (sucrose)