Answer:
Therefore the equilibrium number of vacancies per unit cubic meter =2.34×10²⁴ vacancies/ mole
Explanation:
The equilibrium number of of vacancies is denoted by .
It is depends on
- total no. of atomic number(N)
- energy required for vacancy
- Boltzmann's constant (k)= 8.62×10⁻⁵ev K⁻¹
- temperature (T).
To find equilibrium number of of vacancies we have find N.
Here ρ= 8.45 g/cm³ =8.45 ×10⁶m³
= Avogadro Number = 6.023×10²³
= 63.5 g/mole
g/mole
Here =0.9 ev/atom , T= 1000k
Therefore the equilibrium number of vacancies per unit cubic meter,
=2.34×10²⁴ vacancies/ mole
Does mass<span> alone provide no information about the amount or size of a measured quantity? No, we need combine </span>mass<span> and </span>volume<span> into "one equation" to </span>determine<span> "</span>density<span>" provides more ... </span>g/mL<span>. An </span>object has<span> a mass of </span>75 grams<span> and a volume of </span>25 cc<span>. ... A </span>certain object weighs 1.25 kg<span> and </span>has<span> a </span>density of<span> </span>5.00 g/<span>mL</span>
Answer:
AsF3:C2CI6
4:3
1.3618 moles: 1.02135 moles(1.3618÷4×3)
C2CI6 is the limting reagent
So the number of moles for AsCI3 is 0.817 moles( number of moles of the limting reagant) ÷3 ×4 (according to ratio by balancing chemical equation)=1.09 moles(3 s.f.)
or
Balanced equation
4AsF3 + 3C2Cl6 → 4AsCl3 + 3C2Cl2F4
Use stoichiometry to calculate the moles of AsCl3 that can be produced by each reactant.
Multiply the moles of each reactant by the mole ratio between it and AsCl3 in the balanced equation, so that the moles of the reactant cancel, leaving moles of AsCl3.
Explanation:
Avogadro's number is the number of atoms in one mole of a substance. The number is 6.022 x 10^23 atoms/mol. So, if you have 1 mole of carbon atoms, there will be 6.022 x 10^23 atoms in that sample.
Hope this helps