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30 April, 20:59

Hydrogen is a possible future fuel. However, elemental hydrogen is rare, so it must be obtained from a hydrogen - containing compound such as water. If hydrogen were obtained from water, how much hydrogen, in grams, could be obtained from 1.0 L of water? (density of water = 1.0 g/cm)

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  1. 30 April, 21:18
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    1.1 * 10² g

    Explanation:

    First, we will convert 1.0 L to cubic centimeters.

    1.0 L * (10³ mL/1 L) * (1 cm³ / 1 mL) = 1.0 * 10³ cm³

    The density of water is 1.0 g/cm³. The mass corresponding to 1.0 * 10³ cm³ is:

    1.0 * 10³ cm³ * (1.0 g/cm³) = 1.0 * 10³ g

    1 mole of water (H₂O) has a mass of 18 g, consisting of 2 g of H and 16 g of O. The mass of Hydrogen in 1.0 * 10³ g of water is:

    1.0 * 10³ g H₂O * (2 g H/18 g H₂O) = 1.1 * 10² g
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