Asked by Shine bright shine far
What is the mass of 50.0 L of O2(g) at STP?
O is 16g/mole, so O2 is 32g/mole. 50/32 = 1.5625 moles. 1 mole of any gas at stp is 22.4 liters.
1.5625 × 22.4 = 35 liters.
O is 16g/mole, so O2 is 32g/mole. 50/32 = 1.5625 moles. 1 mole of any gas at stp is 22.4 liters.
1.5625 × 22.4 = 35 liters.
Answers
Answered by
R_scott
do your calculations make sense to you?
you divided the volume of gas by the molar mass ... to get what?
you know the volume (50 L) , and the volume a mole occupies (22.4 L)
so you can find the moles , and use the molar mass to find the total mass
you divided the volume of gas by the molar mass ... to get what?
you know the volume (50 L) , and the volume a mole occupies (22.4 L)
so you can find the moles , and use the molar mass to find the total mass
Answered by
Shine bright shine far
32 g/mol / 22.4 =1.42g/mol
Answered by
R_scott
if one mole occupies 22.4 L , how many moles can fit in 50.0 L?
what is the mass of these moles?
what is the mass of these moles?
Answered by
Shine bright shine far
25.6
Answered by
Doc48
At STP => moles O2 = (50L)/(22.4L/mole) = 2.232 moles O2
2.232 moles O2 = (2.232 mole O2)(32 g/mole) = 71.429 grams O2
2.232 moles O2 = (2.232 mole O2)(32 g/mole) = 71.429 grams O2
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