Suppose we have 100 gr of the substance. Then by weight, it would contain 44.77 gr of C, 7.46 gr of H and 47.76 gr of S. We need to look up the atomic weights of these atoms; M_H=1, M_C=12, M_S=32. The following formula holds (where n are the moles of the substance, M its molecular mass and m its mass): n=m/M. Substituting the known quantities for each element, we get that the substance has 3.73 moles of C, 7.46 moles of H and 1.49 moles of S. In the empirical formula for the molecule, all atoms appear an integer amout of times. Hence, for every mole of Sulfur, we have 2.5 moles of C and 5 moles of H (by taking the moles ratios). Thus, for every 2 moles of sulfur, we have 5 moles of C and 10 moles of H. Now that all the coefficients are integer, we have arrived at an empirical formula for the skunk spray agent:
Answer:
<h2>6426000 mg</h2>
Explanation:
The mass of a substance when given the density and volume can be found by using the formula
mass = Density × volume
From the question
63 mL = 63 cm³
We have
mass = 102 × 63 = 6426
But 1 g = 1000 mg
6426 g = 6426000 mg
We have the final answer as
<h3>6,426,000 mg</h3>
Hope this helps you
Answer:
See the explanation
Explanation:
In this case, we have to keep in mind that in the monosubstituted product we only have to replace 1 hydrogen with another group. In this case, we are going to use the methyl group .
In the axial position, we have a more steric hindrance because we have two hydrogens near to the group. If we have <u>more steric hindrance</u> the molecule would be <u>more unstable</u>. In the equatorial positions, we don't <u>any interactions</u> because the group is pointing out. If we don't have <u>any steric hindrance</u> the molecule will be <u>more stable</u>, that's why the molecule will <u>the equatorial position.</u>
See figure 1
I hope it helps!
The branch of medicine that deals with the use of radioactive substances in research, diagnosis, and treatment.
Answer:
the third one
Explanation:
if you look at it mathematically its the one that makes the most sense