Asked by iuytrewedtjk
Which statement describes the quantities that can be found using the number of moles?(1 point)
Responses
It can be used to find the number of molecules, but not atoms or ions.
It can be used to find the number of molecules, but not atoms or ions.
It can be used to find the number of molecules, atoms, or ions.
It can be used to find the number of molecules, atoms, or ions.
It can be used to find the number of molecules or ions, but not atoms.
It can be used to find the number of molecules or ions, but not atoms.
It can be used to find the number of molecules or atoms, but not ions.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
It can be used to find the number of molecules, atoms, or ions.
Explanation: 1 mole = 6.022×10^23 entities (Avogadro's number), so multiply moles by 6.022×10^23 to get the number of molecules, atoms, ions, or formula units (accounting for how many atoms/ions are in each particle).
Explanation: 1 mole = 6.022×10^23 entities (Avogadro's number), so multiply moles by 6.022×10^23 to get the number of molecules, atoms, ions, or formula units (accounting for how many atoms/ions are in each particle).
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