Asked by E'Manuel
How many moles of ammonium nitrate is created from 10.7 grams of ammonium nitrate? Thus how many grams of ammonium nitrate is needed to make exactly one mole of ammonium nitrate?
Answers
Answered by
Jai
Ammonium Nitrate is NH4NO3
We need the get the molar mass of this. From the periodic table, the masses of each element in the chemical formula
N - 14
H - 1
O - 16
So for NH4NO3,
14 + 4*1 + 14 + 3*16 = 80 g/mol
To get the number of moles, we simply divide the given mass by its molar mass. Thus,
10.7 g / 80 g/mol = 0.13375 mol NH4NO3
Well if you have 1 mole of NH4NO3,
1 mol NH4NO3 * (80 g/mol) = 80 g NH4NO3
hope this helps~ `u`
We need the get the molar mass of this. From the periodic table, the masses of each element in the chemical formula
N - 14
H - 1
O - 16
So for NH4NO3,
14 + 4*1 + 14 + 3*16 = 80 g/mol
To get the number of moles, we simply divide the given mass by its molar mass. Thus,
10.7 g / 80 g/mol = 0.13375 mol NH4NO3
Well if you have 1 mole of NH4NO3,
1 mol NH4NO3 * (80 g/mol) = 80 g NH4NO3
hope this helps~ `u`
There are no AI answers yet. The ability to request AI answers is coming soon!
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.