Asked by chris
A solution of AgNO3 contains 29.66 g of solute in 100.0 mL of solution. What is the molarity of the solution?
Answers
Answered by
DrBob222
moles = grams/molar mass.
M = moles/L of solution.
M = moles/L of solution.
Answered by
chris
29.66/100.0=.2966 molar mass
i don't know where to go from here.
i don't know where to go from here.
Answered by
DrBob222
The molar mass of AgNO3 is not 100. Add up atomic mass Ag, N, and three O atoms to get the molar mass (the periodic tab le will give you the atomic masss).
Then 29.66 g/molar mass = moles AgNO3.
Then moles AgNO3/liters of soln= M.
(They tell you the solution is 100 mL. That's 0.100 L.
Then 29.66 g/molar mass = moles AgNO3.
Then moles AgNO3/liters of soln= M.
(They tell you the solution is 100 mL. That's 0.100 L.
Answered by
Nick
Molecular weight os AgNO3 = 169.87
You have 29.66 g, therefore you have 29.66 / 169.87 moles = 0.174 moles. This is in 100 ml. Molarity is moles per liter, so, 0.174 x (1000/100) = 1.75. Concentration of the solution = 1.75 M. Worked out with chemCal for the iPhone/iPod Touch.
You have 29.66 g, therefore you have 29.66 / 169.87 moles = 0.174 moles. This is in 100 ml. Molarity is moles per liter, so, 0.174 x (1000/100) = 1.75. Concentration of the solution = 1.75 M. Worked out with chemCal for the iPhone/iPod Touch.
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.