The molarity is 2 mol/L.
The molarity is 6 mol/l.
The molarity is 0,041
The molarity of the solution is calculated by dividing the moles of solute (0.250 mol NaCl) by the liters of solution (2.25 L). Molarity = moles of solute / liters of solution Molarity = 0.250 mol / 2.25 L = 0.111 M
20.2 g of CuCl2 = .1502 mol CuCl2 M=mol/L M=.1502 mol/L
The molarity of the solution is 1.0 M. This is calculated by dividing the number of moles of solute (0.5 mol Cu(NO3)2) by the volume of the solution in liters (0.5 L).
The molarity is 2 mol/L.
The molarity of a solution with 3 mol of glucose in 6 kg of water cannot be determined without knowing the volume of the solution. Molarity is defined as the amount of solute (in mol) divided by the volume of the solution in liters. Without the volume, the molarity of the solution cannot be calculated.
4 mol/0.800 kg
molarity = moles/litre [solution] = 12 mol/6 L [solution] = 2 mol/L = 2 M
No, adding water to a solution does not change the molarity of the solute. The molarity of a solution is calculated using the amount of solute and the volume of the solution, so diluting with water only changes the volume, not the amount of solute present.
The molarity is 6 mol/l.
The molarity of a solution is calculated by dividing the number of moles of solute by the volume of the solution in liters. In this case, with 1/2 mol of Cu(NO3)2 in 1/2 L of water, the molarity is 1 M (1 mol/L).
The molarity of the solution can be calculated by dividing the number of moles of solute by the volume of the solution in liters. Therefore, the molarity of the solution is 0.400 mol / 9.79 L = 0.041 mol/L.
Molarity = moles of solute/Liters of solution Molarity = 0.202 moles KCl/7.98 Liters = 0.253 M KCl solution ================
The molarity is 0,041
The molarity of the solution can be calculated by dividing the number of moles of solute (0.202 mol KCl) by the volume of the solution in liters (7.98 L). So, molarity = 0.202 mol / 7.98 L ≈ 0.025 mol/L.