Late answer:
Chromosphere.
Lesser. atomic number means proton number
Question:
A chemistry student needs of 10 g isopropenylbenzene for an experiment. He has available 120 g of a 42.7% w/w solution of isopropenylbenzene in acetone. Calculate the mass of solution the student should use. If there's not enough solution, press the "No solution" button.
Answer:
The answer to the question is as follows
The mass of solution the student should use is 23.42 g.
Explanation:
To solve the question we note the following
A solution containing 42.7 % w/w of isopropenylbenzene in acetone has 42.7 g of isopropenylbenzene in 100 grams of the solution
Therefore we have 10 g of isopropenylbenzene contained in
100 g * 10 g/ 42.7 g = 23.42 g of solution
Available solution = 120 g
Therefore the quantity to used from the available solution = 23.42 g of the isopropenylbenzene in acetone solution.
The volume of the gas that occupy at STP is 165. 28 cm^3
calculation
by use of combined gas law that is P1V1/T1=P2V2/T2, where
P1=84.6 kpa
T1=23.5 +273=296.5 K
V1=215 cm^3
At STP T= 273 K and P= 101.325 Kpa
therefore p2 = 101.325 Kpa and T2 = 272 K V2=?
by making V2 the subject of the formula V2 =T2P1V1/P2T1
V2 = 273 K x 84.6 Kpa x 215 cm^3/ 101,.325 Kpa x296.5 K =165.28 cm^3
In chemistry, the molar mass M is a physical property defined as the mass of a given substance (chemical element or chemical compound) divided by its amount of substance. The base SI unit for molar mass is kg/mol. However, for historical reasons, molar masses are almost always expressed in g/mol.
Hope this helped!
Good luck :p
~Emmy <3