It’s the second answer. “it gets used for metabolic process & released as heat” i think.
The answer:
all that we search for is the number of mole of HCl and the number of mole of C2H6O
M(HCl) = 5.5g/ mole of HCl , so mole of HCl = 5.5/M(HCl), where M(HCl) is the molar mass.
M(HCl) = 1+ 36.5= 37.5
moles of HCl = 5.5/37.5=0.14
M(C2H6O) = 200g / moles of C2H6O, so moles of C2H6O=200g / M(C2H6O)
M(C2H6O)= 2x12+ 6 + 16=46,
moles of C2H6O=200g / 46 =<span>4.35 </span><span> moles
</span>
the sum of the moles is 0.14 + <span>4.35 </span> = 4.501 moles
finally, <span>The mole fraction of hcl in a solution prepared by dissolving 5.5 g of hcl in 200 g of c2h6o is 0.031
</span>
because it can be found by 0.14 / 4.501= 0.031
Answer:
54 g
Explanation:
1 mole of water = H2O
mass of 1 mole of H2O= mass of h2 + mass of o
= 2× mass of h +mass of o
= 2×1+16 =18 g
1 mole of water = 18g
3moles of water = 18×3g= 54g
To determine mass of the given number of atoms of mercury, we need a factor that would relate the number of atoms to number of moles. In this case, we use the Avogadro's number. It is a <span>number that represents the
number of units in one mole of any substance. This has the value of 6.022 x
10^23 units / mole. The number of units could be atoms, molecules, ions or electrons. To convert into mass, we use the given amu of mercury since it is equal to grams per mole. We calculate as follows:
</span>3.0 x 10^10 atoms ( 1 mol / 6.022 x 10^23 atoms ) ( 200.59 g / 1 mol ) = 9.99x10^-12 g Hg
Answer:
252.68 K or -20.46 °C
Explanation:
According to Gay-Lussac's Law, "Pressure and Temperature at given volume are directly proportional to each other".
Mathematically,
P₁ / T₁ = P₂ / T₂ ---- (1)
Data Given:
P₁ = 30.7 kPa
T₁ = 0.00 °C = 273.15 K
P₂ = 28.4 kPa
T₂ = <u>???</u>
Solving equation for T₂,
T₂ = P₂ T₁ / P₁
Putting values,
T₂ = 28.4 kPa × 273.15 K / 30.7 kPa
T₂ = 252.68 K or -20.46 °C