The number of moles present in 29.5 grams of argon is 0.74 mole.
The atomic mass of argon is given as;
Ar = 39.95 g/mole
The number of moles present in 29.5 grams of argon is calculated as follows;
39.95 g ------------------------------- 1 mole
29.5 g ------------------------------ ?
Thus, the number of moles present in 29.5 grams of argon is 0.74 mole.
<em>"Your question seems to be missing the correct symbol for the element" </em>
Argon = Ar
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<span>CH4 + 4 Cl2 → CCl4 + 4 HCl
(4.00 mol CH4) x (1/1) x (0.70) = 2.80 mol CCl4
(4.00 mol CH4) x (4/1) x (0.70) = 11.2 mol HCl
CCl4 + 2 HF → CCl2F2 + 2 HCl
(2.80 mol CCl4) x (2/1) x (0.70) = 3.92 mol HCl
11.2 mol + 3.92 mol = 15.1 mol HCl from both steps</span>
Answer:
I would expect to extract the acetic acid.
Explanation:
In the first step, since we are adding a concentrated acid,<u> it will react with the bases present in the mixture (diethylamine and ammonia) </u><u>forming salts</u><u>, </u><u>which are soluble in water</u>. Therefore, after draining the aqueous layer, we will have phenol and acetic acid left in the organic layer.
In the second step, we are adding a diluted base, so it will react with a strong acid. This compound is acetic acid, and its salt will be present in the aqueous layer. Phenol will be left on the organic layer.
Answer:
0.24M
Explanation:
The equation for the reaction is given below:
H2SO4 + 2KOH → K2SO4 + 2H2O
From the equation above, we obtained the following information:
nA (mole of acid) = 1
nB (mole of base) = 2
Data obtained from the question include:
Va (volume of the acid) = 12mL
Ca (concentration of the acid) =?
Vb (volume of the base) = 36mL
Cb (concentration of the base) = 0.16 M
The Ca (concentration of the acid) can be obtained as follow:
CaVa/CbVb = nA/nB
Ca x 12 / 0.16 x 36 = 1 /2
Cross multiply to express in linear form as shown below:
Ca x 12 x 2 = 0.16 x 36
Divide both side by 12 x 2
Ca = 0.16 x 36/ 12 x 2
Ca = 0.24M
Therefore, the concentration of the acid is 0.24M