There are 17 micromoles in 5.00mg of aspartame. 5.00mg has a molecular weight of 294.303 g/mol. Aspartame is composed of carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen and oxygen. The chemical formula for aspartame is C14H18N2O5. The molar mass is 294.30 g mol−1. There are 6.022 x 10 ^23 molecules in a mole
no of moles in aspartame =mass/molar mass=1.2/294=0.00408mols no of molecules=0.00408* avagadros no.=0.00408*6.022*10^23=0.02456*10^23 no. of atoms =no.of molecules*2(coz 2 atoms of nitrogen are present)=0.02456*10^23*2
Molecular formulaC14H18N2O5Molar mass294.3 g mol−1Density1.347 g/cm3Melting point246-247 °CBoiling pointdecomposesSolubility in watersparingly solubleSolubilityslightly soluble in ethanolAcidity (pKa)4.5-6.0
2.50 grams C14H18N2O5 (1 mole C14H18N2O5/294.304 grams)(18 moles H/1 mole C14H18N2O5)(6.022 X 1023/1 mole H) = 9.21 X 1022 atoms of aspartame
H16 would have the largest amount of atoms, so the answer would be:hydrogen
To find the number of hydrogen atoms in 2.43 g of aspartame, calculate the number of moles of aspartame using its molar mass. Aspartame has a molar mass of 294.3 g/mol. Then, determine the number of moles of hydrogen atoms in one molecule of aspartame (the chemical formula of aspartame is C14H18N2O5). Finally, multiply the number of moles of aspartame by the number of moles of hydrogen atoms to find the total number of hydrogen atoms in 2.43 g of aspartame.
The chemical formula for aspartame is C14H18N2O5. The molar weight is 294.3 grams/mol, so there are .00001699 moles of aspartame. Using Avogadro's number, there are 1.023 E19 molecules, each containing 18 hydrogen atoms. So there are 1.842 E20 atoms of hydrogen.
The chemical formula of Aspartame is C14H18N2O so it consists of Carbon (14 atoms), Hydrogen (18 atoms), Nitrogen (2 atoms) and Oxygen (one atom).
There are 10 hydrogen atoms present in 4C2H5OH.
Aspartame is a covalent compound. It consists of covalent bonds between the atoms of carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, and oxygen in its chemical structure.
The chemical formula for aspartame is C14H18N2O5. The molar mass is 294.30 g mol−1. If we have 2.50 mg of aspartame, we have 8.495 x 10^-6 mol of aspartame. There are 6.022 x 10 ^23 molecules in a mole so we have 5.116 x 10 ^18 aspartame molecules. There are 18 H atoms per aspartame molecule so there are 9.028 x 10^19 H atoms present in 2.50 mg of aspartame.
There are 2 hydrogen atoms present in sulfuric acid (H2SO4).
there are 2 atoms of hydrogen in water
1 Hydrogen atom is present in H2SOn4.
There are carbon and hydrogen atoms present in hydrocarbons.
Hydrogen exists as H2 which is a molecule. There are thus two atoms present.
Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen and Nitrogen.