There are 1.81 x 10^24 sucrose molecules in 3.0 moles of sucrose.
To find the number of moles, divide the number of molecules by Avogadro's number. 4.651024 molecules of NO2 divided by 6.022 x 10^23 molecules/mol equals approximately 7.72 x 10^-24 moles.
To convert from number of molecules to moles, we use Avogadro's number: 1 mole = 6.022x10^23 molecules. Therefore, 1.0x10^19 HCl molecules is equal to 1.66x10^-5 moles of HCl.
To convert molecules to moles, divide the number of molecules by Avogadro's number (6.022 x 10^23). Therefore, 3.4 x 10^23 molecules of H2SO4 is equal to approximately 0.056 moles.
To find the number of moles in 3.4 Γ 10^23 molecules of H2SO4, you need to divide the given number of molecules by Avogadro's number (6.022 Γ 10^23 molecules/mol). 3.4 Γ 10^23 molecules / 6.022 Γ 10^23 molecules/mol = 0.565 moles of H2SO4.
23 moles of oxygen contain 138,509.10e23 molecules.
0,565 moles
1,125 moles of sodium sulfate contain 6,774908464125.10e23 molecules.
The equivalent is 1,6.10e-15 moles.
The answer is 6,227 moles.
The answer is 1,21 moles.
6,022140857.1023 molecules---------------------------------------------1 mole2.1022 molecules--------------------------------------------------------------x molex = 0,033 moles
1 mole of molecules = 6.022 x 1023 molecules 1.25 moles of molecules x 6.022 x 1023 molecules/mol molecules = 7.53 x 1023 molecules
4,5.10e28 molecules of sodium fluoride NaF are equal to 0,745.10e5 moles.
There are 1.81 x 10^24 sucrose molecules in 3.0 moles of sucrose.
4,96 x 1024 molecules of glucose is equal to 8,236 moles.
If 4,65.10e24 is the number of molecules (ions, atoms) the answer is 7,72 moles.