Cholesterol is an example of a lipid.
Answer:
The empirical formula is ZnO2
Explanation:
What is the empirical formula for a compound which contains 67.1% zinc and the rest is oxygen?
Step 1: Data given
Suppose the compound has a mass of 100.0 grams
A compound contains:
67.1 % Zinc = 67.1 grams
100 - 67.1 = 32.9 % oxygen = 32.9 grams
Molar mass of Zinc = 65.38 g/mol
Molar mass of O = 16 g/mol
Step 2: Calculate moles of Zinc
Suppose the compound is 100 grams
Moles Zn = 67. 10 grams / 65.38 g/mol
Moles Zn = 1.026 moles
Step 3: Calculate moles of O
Moles O = 32.90 grams / 16.00 g/mol
Moles O = 2.056 moles
Step 4: Calculate mol ratio
We divide by the smallest amount of moles
Zn: 1.026/1.026 = 1
O: 2.056/1.026 = 2
The empirical formula is ZnO2
To control this we can calculate the % Zinc for 1 mol
65.38 / (65.38+2*16) = 0.67.1 = 67.2 %
I think that the answer could be A. X and Y
Answer:
4.852*10^23
Explanation:
Use dimensional analysis.
First turn grams to moles using the molar mass of Fe (you can't convert to atoms from grams).
Then turn moles into atoms using Avogadro's constant.
45g Fe/55.85 g/mol Fe*6.022*10^23 atoms Fe