Answer:
Your strategy here will be to use the molar mass of potassium bromide,
KBr
, as a conversion factor to help you find the mass of three moles of this compound.
So, a compound's molar mass essentially tells you the mass of one mole of said compound. Now, let's assume that you only have a periodic table to work with here.
Potassium bromide is an ionic compound that is made up of potassium cations,
K
+
, and bromide anions,
Br
−
. Essentially, one formula unit of potassium bromide contains a potassium atom and a bromine atom.
Use the periodic table to find the molar masses of these two elements. You will find
For K:
M
M
=
39.0963 g mol
−
1
For Br:
M
M
=
79.904 g mol
−
1
To get the molar mass of one formula unit of potassium bromide, add the molar masses of the two elements
M
M KBr
=
39.0963 g mol
−
1
+
79.904 g mol
−
1
≈
119 g mol
−
So, if one mole of potassium bromide has a mas of
119 g
m it follows that three moles will have a mass of
3
moles KBr
⋅
molar mass of KBr
119 g
1
mole KBr
=
357 g
You should round this off to one sig fig, since that is how many sig figs you have for the number of moles of potassium bromide, but I'll leave it rounded to two sig figs
mass of 3 moles of KBr
=
∣
∣
∣
∣
¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯
a
a
360 g
a
a
∣
∣
−−−−−−−−−
Explanation:
<em>a</em><em>n</em><em>s</em><em>w</em><em>e</em><em>r</em><em>:</em><em> </em><em>3</em><em>6</em><em>0</em><em> </em><em>g</em><em> </em>
Answer: Depending on the state of change it can be a physical change. Example: Evaporation is the physical change of a liquid turned into a gas.
That said, I'm pretty sure the answer is (True)
Note: Hope this is correct and it helps. Good luck :)
The answer you're looking for is: a wave.
Answer:
The answer to your question is it is not at equilibrium, it will move to the products.
Explanation:
Data
Keq = 2400
Volume = 1 L
moles of NO = 0.024
moles of N₂ = 2
moles of O₂ = 2.6
Process
1.- Determine the concentration of reactants and products
[NO] = 0.024 / 1 = 0.024
[N₂] = 2/1 = 2
[O₂] = 2.6/ 1= 2.6
2.- Balanced chemical reaction
N₂ + O₂ ⇒ 2NO
3.- Write the equation for the equilibrium of this reaction
Keq = [NO]²/[N₂][O₂]
- Substitution
Keq = [0.024]² / [2][2.6]
-Simplification
Keq = 0.000576 / 5.2
-Result
Keq = 1.11 x 10⁻⁴
Conclusion
It is not at equilibrium, it will move to the products because the experimental Keq was lower than the Keq theoretical-
1.11 x 10⁻⁴ < 2400
I can give you a clue of getting mass. if it is the atomic number is even multiply by 2 but if the atomic number is odd multiply by 2 and add 1
sodium atomic number = 11 so mass = 11*2 +1 = 23
oxygen. atomic number = 8 so mass = 8*2 = 16
carbon atomic number = 6 so mass = 6*2 = 12