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
Answer: There are
atoms present in 0.500 mol of
.
Explanation:
According to the mole concept, there are
atoms present in 1 mole of a substance.
In a molecule of
there is only one carbon atom present. Therefore, number of carbon atoms present in 0.500 mol of
are as follows.

Thus, we can conclude that there are
atoms present in 0.500 mol of
.
What's your question? Am I missing something?
Answer:
Explanation:
<u>1) Find the z-scores:</u>
a) z-score for 22.6 inches length
- z = [ 22.6 - 20 ] / 2.6 = 1.00
b) z-score for 17.4 inches length
- z = [ 17.4 - 20 ] / 2.6 = - 1.00
<u>2) Probability</u>
Then, you have to find the probability that the length of an infant is between - 1.00 and 1.00 standards deviations (σ) from the mean (μ).
That is a well known value of 68%, which is part of the 68-95-99.7 empirical rule.
The most exact result is obtained from tables and is 68.26%:
- 1 - P (z ≥ 1.00) - P (z ≤ - 1.00) = 1 - 0.1587 - 0.1587 = 0.6826 = 68.26%