A mol is a mol is a mol - no. A mol is a standard unit of measurement and thus any substance, when designated a "mol" will have the same number of particles. Therefore, a mol of salt would have the same number of particles as a mol of sugar. It is like asking if a pound of feathers would weigh more or less than a pound of steel.
Im assuming you mean tablesalt (NaCl)?
Then 1 mole of sugar weighs more.
Sugar has the molecule formula: C6H12O6
The mole mass is: 6*12 + 12*1 + 6*16 = 180 g/mol
Sodiumchloride has the molecule formula NaCl
The mole mass is: 23 + 35.5 = 58 g/mol
so 1 mole of sugar weighs 180/58= 3 times as much as sodiumchloride
Assuming complete combustion, one mole of sugar produces 11 moles of water.
The freezing point of water decreases by about 1.86 degrees Celsius for each mole of solute (such as sugar) dissolved in 1 kg of water. So, the freezing point would decrease by 1.86 degrees Celsius for every mole of sugar added.
A mole of any substance contains Avogadro's number of particles (6.02 x 10^23). The molar mass of copper is less than that of lead, so a mole of copper atoms weighs less than a mole of lead atoms, despite both containing the same number of atoms.
The molar mass of water is approximately 18.02 g/mol. Therefore, one mole of water would weigh approximately 18.02 grams, considering 4 significant figures.
A mole of deuterium atoms would weigh approximately 2 grams. This is because the atomic mass of deuterium is around 2 grams per mole.
No. A mole of hydrogen (in its normal form) weighs 2 grams. A mole of water weighs 18 grams.
Assuming complete combustion, one mole of sugar produces 11 moles of water.
Adding one mole of salt raises the boiling point of the water more than adding one mole of sugar to the water
It depends how much water and how much ice you hae. if you have 1 ice cube and 6 cups of water, the water will weigh more. But, if you have 10 ice cubes and 1/4 cup of water the ice will weigh more.
The mass of NH3 mole = its molecular weight = 14 + 3 x 1 = 17 The mass of H2O mole = its molecular weight = 2 x 1 + 16 = 18 This means that one mole of NH3 weigh less than one mole of H2O
The freezing point of water decreases by about 1.86 degrees Celsius for each mole of solute (such as sugar) dissolved in 1 kg of water. So, the freezing point would decrease by 1.86 degrees Celsius for every mole of sugar added.
A mole of any substance contains Avogadro's number of particles (6.02 x 10^23). The molar mass of copper is less than that of lead, so a mole of copper atoms weighs less than a mole of lead atoms, despite both containing the same number of atoms.
sugar is a covalent compound where as salt is an ionic compound,so salt while dissolving in the water splits.This is mainly dependent of the 'total dissolved partical' concentration (mol/L):Sugar (C6H12O6): 1 mole particles per 180 g (for 1 mole sugar)Salt (NaCl) 2 mole particles per 58.5 g (for 1 mole salt) = 6 mole particles per about 180In water the freezing point will be lowered by 1.86oC per mole particles dissolved: So 180 g/L sugar: freeze at -1.86oCand 175.5 g/L salt freeze at -(6*1.86) = -11.2oCor 29.2 g/L salt will freeze at the same as 180 g suger: -1.86oC
A mole of water weighs more than a mole of sucrose. This is because the molar mass of water (18 g/mol) is less than the molar mass of sucrose (342 g/mol).
No. Think of it this way - say you had 20 basketballs and 20 bowling balls. Will the basketballs weigh the same as the bowling balls? No, because an individual basketball weighs less than a bowling ball, so if you have equal numbers of them, they aren't going to weigh the same. Now take 6.02 × 1023 atoms (one mole) of neon and 6.02 × 1023 atoms of aluminum. One atom of neon is going to weigh less than one atom of aluminum, so equal numbers of them aren't going to weigh the same.
The molar mass of water is approximately 18.02 g/mol. Therefore, one mole of water would weigh approximately 18.02 grams, considering 4 significant figures.
A mole of deuterium atoms would weigh approximately 2 grams. This is because the atomic mass of deuterium is around 2 grams per mole.