It would be false adding a solute to a solvent
The chemical symbol for sodium bicarbonate is NaHCO3. Its molar mass is 84 g/mol. In each of one mol of sodium bicarbonate their is one mole of carbon dioxide with the molar mass of 44 grams per mol. We determine the number of moles in 0.10 g of sodium bicarbonate.
n sodium bicarbonate = (0.10 g) / (84 grams / mol)
= 1.19 x 10-3 moles sodium bicarbonate
Therefore, there are also 1.19 x 10-3 moles of carbon dioxide.
<span>So what happens when there is more than one force? I like to think of net force as if two people were pulling on ropes attached to a big crate. If they pull the crate in the same direction, the crate will accelerate twice as quickly. If they pull in opposite directions with equal forces, the crate won’t move at all — these two forces cancel each other out. If one person pulls northwards and the other pulls eastwards, the crate will move to the north-east.
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One molecule of sucrose is burned with oxygen to make carbon dioxide and water.
Disaccharide sugar sucrose is composed of glucose and fructose. It is produced naturally by plants and is the main component of white sugar. C₁₂H₂₂O₁₁ is the chemical formula for it.
Extraction and refining sucrose for human use can be done from either sugarcane or sugar beet. Raw sugar is created from crushing the cane, which is consistently delivered to other sectors to be refined into pure sucrose. Sugar mills generally are located in the tropical regions near the sugarcane plantations.
<em> C₁₂H₂₂O₁₁ + 12O₂ → 12CO₂ + 11H₂O</em>
When one molecule of sucrose is burnt, we get 12 carbon dioxide molecules.
To learn more about sucrose,
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Answer:
HCl
Explanation:
<em>Choices:</em>
<em>CO: 28.01g/mol</em>
<em>NO₂: 46g/mol</em>
<em>CH₄: 16.04g/mol</em>
<em>HCl: 36.4g/mol</em>
<em>CO₂: 44.01g/mol</em>
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It is possible to identify a substance finding its molar mass (That is, the ratio between its mass in grams and its moles). It is possible to find the moles of the gas using general ideal gas law:
PV = nRT
<em>Where P is pressure of gas 0.764atm; V its volume, 0.279L; n moles; R gas constant: 0.082atmL/molK and T its absolute temperature, 295.85K (22.7°C + 273.15).</em>
Replacing:
PV = nRT
PV / RT = n
0.764atm*0.279L / 0.082atmL/molKₓ295.85K = n
<em>8.786x10⁻³ = moles of the gas</em>
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As the mass of the gas is 0.320g; its molar mass is:
0.320g / 8.786x10⁻³moles = 36.4 g/mol
Based in the group of answer choices, the identity of the gas is:
<h3>HCl</h3>
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