It’s Calcium hope that helps!
The number of moles of C present in C₅H₁₂ that contains 22.5 g of H is 9.375 moles
<h3>How to determine the mass of C₅H₁₂ that contains 22.5 g of H</h3>
1 mole of C₅H₁₂ = (12×5) + (1×12) = 72 g
Mass of H in 1 mole of C₅H₁₂ = 12 × 1 = 12 g
Thus,
12 g of H is present in 72 g of C₅H₁₂
Therefore,
22.5 g of H will be present in = (22.5 × 72) / 12 = 135 g of C₅H₁₂
<h3>How to determine the mole of C present in 135 g of C₅H₁₂</h3>
72 g of C₅H₁₂ contains 5 moles of C
Therefore,
135 g of C₅H₁₂ will contain = (135 × 5) / 72 = 9.375 moles of C
Thus, 9.375 moles of C is present in C₅H₁₂ that contains 22.5 g of H
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boron, carbon, nitrogen, oxygen and flourine families in addition to the noble gases.
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<span>The </span>abundance of a chemical element<span> is a measure of the </span>occurrence<span> of the </span>element<span> relative to all other elements in a given environment. Abundance is measured in one of three ways: by the </span>mass-fraction<span> (the same as weight fraction); by the </span>mole-fraction<span> (fraction of atoms by numerical count, or sometimes fraction of molecules in gases); or by the </span>volume-fraction<span>. Volume-fraction is a common abundance measure in mixed gases such as planetary atmospheres, and is similar in value to molecular mole-fraction for gas mixtures at relatively low densities and pressures, and </span>ideal gas<span> mixtures. Most abundance values in this article are given as mass-fractions.
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