In general, the further away an electron is from the nucleus, the easier it is for it to be expelled. In other words, ionization energy is a function of atomic radius; the larger the radius, the smaller the amount of energy required to remove the electron from the outer most orbital. For example, it would be far easier to take electrons away from the larger element of Ca (Calcium) than it would be from one where the electrons are held tighter to the nucleus, like Cl (Chlorine). Hope this helped a little not the exact answer though :)
What’s the weather like in the other states?
Lar mass of Ca<span> = 40.08 </span>grams/mole 77.4 g Ca<span> * ( 1 </span>mole Ca<span>/ 40.08 ... n = m / M 1mol </span>Ca<span>weights 40 gmol-1 n = 77,4 / 40 = 1.93 </span>mol<span>.</span>
Let's note that 1 pint = 473.1765 mL, so 11 pints should be 5204.9415 mL.
We make a proportion out of the word problem
(85 mg glucose/ 100 mL) times (1 g/ 1000 mg) = 4.4242 grams of glucose