Ask Question
27 June, 16:02

If the density of ocean water at a depth of 1.00 x 104 m is 1.071 g/ml and if 21.0 g of water at that depth contains 197 mg of potassium chloride, what is the molarity of potassium chloride in the sample

+4
Answers (1)
  1. 27 June, 17:52
    0
    The molarity concentration is simply the ratio of the number of moles of solute over the total volume of the solution.

    The molar mass of potassium chloride is 74.55 g/mol, so the moles is:

    moles KCl = 0.197 g / (74.55 g/mol) = 2.64 x 10^-3 mol

    Assuming that the volume of KCl is negligible so that the total volume of solution is simply equal to the volume of water, so:

    Volume = 21 g / [ (1.071 g / mL) * (1000 mL / 1 L) ] = 0.0196 L

    So the molarity is:

    Molarity = 2.64 x 10^-3 mol / 0.0196 L

    Molarity = 0.135 moles / L = 0.135 M
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Find an answer to your question ✅ “If the density of ocean water at a depth of 1.00 x 104 m is 1.071 g/ml and if 21.0 g of water at that depth contains 197 mg of potassium ...” in 📘 Chemistry if you're in doubt about the correctness of the answers or there's no answer, then try to use the smart search and find answers to the similar questions.
Search for Other Answers