Mg will have a higher amu than Be but a lower amu than Ca.
Here's the balanced equation: 2NaCl+F2==>2NaF+Cl2
I will show you with detailed work for NaCl, but follow the same procedure for the rest of the compounds.
Molar Mass - Find the molar mass of the Na and the Cl and add them together
Na - 23
Cl - 35.5
Add those numbers together 23 + 35.5 = 58.5 g/mol
Moles in 1 tsp:
The mass measured in 1tsp of NaCl was 18 g. To calculate the amount of moles you take the mass measured and divide it by the molecular weight.
18/58.5 = 0.3077 mol
Moles of each element:
To find the moles each element in the compound you multiply the moles of 1 tsp by the number of atoms of the element in the compound
Na - 1 in NaCl
Cl - 1 in Na Cl
so take 0.3077 * 1 = 0.3077 moles Na (and Cl in this case)
Atoms of each:
take the number of moles calculated and multiply that by Avogadro's number(6.023x10^23) for the number of molecules
So for both Na and Cl:
0.3077 * 6.023x10^23 = 1.853x10^23 atoms for both Na and Cl
The answer would be:
A. Cancel out CO because it appears as a reactant in one intermediate reaction and a product in the other intermediate reaction.
In this question, there are two half-reaction equations. To merge them up, you need to add the reactant with the reactant, then the product with the product. If there is a molecule on both side, you can cancel them. The full reaction would be:
C+ 1/2 O2 + CO + 1/2O2 ==>CO+ CO2 -----> remove CO from both side
C+ O2 ==>CO2
Answer:
double displacement reaction also neutralization reaction cause of acid and base