Ask Question
1 March, 21:11

A chemist pours 1 mol of zinc granules into one beaker and 1 mol of zinc chloride powder into another beaker. What do the two samples have in common?

+3
Answers (1)
  1. 1 March, 22:15
    0
    Answer is: two samples have in common same amount of substance and same number of particles.

    1) There are same amount of substance in both beakers:

    n (Zn) = 1 mol.

    n (ZnCl ₂) = 1 mol.

    2) There are same number of particles (atoms, molecules, ions) in both beakers:

    N (Zn) = n (Zn) · Na.

    N (Zn) = 1 mol · 6.023·10²³ 1/mol = 6.023·10²³ atoms of zinc.

    N (ZnCl₂) = n (ZnCl₂) · Na.

    N (ZnCl₂) = 1 mol · 6.023·10²³ 1/mol = 6.023·10²³ molecules of zinc (II) chloride.

    Na - Avogadro number.
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Find an answer to your question ✅ “A chemist pours 1 mol of zinc granules into one beaker and 1 mol of zinc chloride powder into another beaker. What do the two samples have ...” 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