Using the given formula, the density of the material is 2.015 g/mL
<h3>Calculating Density </h3>
From the question, we are to determine the density of the material
From the given formula
Density = Mass / Volume
And from the given information,
Mass = 65.5 g
and volume = 32.5 mL
Putting the parameters into the equation,
Density = 65.5/32.5
Density = 2.015 g/mL
Hence, the density of the material is 2.015 g/mL.
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There are 4 lone pairs of electrons present in the carbon dioxide molecule
Answer:
Mass = 179.9 g
Explanation:
Given data:
Volume of solution = 450 mL
Molarity of solution = 2.00 M
Mass in gram required = ?
Solution:
Volume of solution = 450 mL× 1 L / 1000 mL = 0.45 L
Molarity = number of moles of solute/ Volume of solution in L
2.00 M = number of moles of solute / 0.45 L
Number of moles of solute = 2.00 M × 0.45 L
M = mol/L
number of moles of solute = 0.9 mol
Mass of CaBr₂ in gram:
Mass = number of moles × molar mass
Mass = 0.9 mol ×199.89 g/mol
Mass = 179.9 g
Hello!
The chemical reaction for the dissolving of calcium fluoride is the following:
CaF₂(s) ⇄ Ca⁺²(aq) + 2F⁻(aq)
In this reaction, and according to Le Chatelier's principle, the action that would shift this reaction away from solid calcium fluoride and towards the dissolved ions is the removing of fluoride ions.
Le Chatelier's principle states that in an equilibrium reaction, the system would shift in the opposite direction of the changes. If we remove fluoride ions from the system, it will shift towards the formation of more fluoride ions by dissolving more Calcium Fluoride to achieve equilibrium again.
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Answer: See below
Explanation: a. The mass of an element is composed of:
protons: 1 amu each
neutrons: 1 amu each
electrons: 0 amu each
Only the protons and neutrons are counted in the atomic mass of an element
b. Electrons are assigned a mass of 0. They do have a mass, but it is exceedingly small compared to the protons and neutrons, so they are left out of the calculation of an element's mass.
c. An element becomes unstable if the neutrons exceed the protons by a certain ratio, dependent on the element.