CH4 has a molecular weight of 16, which makes the math easy.
Each mole of carbon has a weight of 12. Each carbon binds with 2 oxygen to make CO2. The oxygen weighs 16. CO2 weighs 12+2*16=44 grams.
Each mole of hydrogen weighs 1 g. 2 Hydrogens bind with 1 oxygen to make H2O, which has a weight of 18g. There are 4 hydrogen atoms available so we make 2 water molecules with a total weight of 36g.
The total mass of products of combustion for 16 g of methane is about 80 g.
To find the number of atoms in 16 grams of CH4, you first need to convert the mass to moles using the molar mass of methane (CH4 = 16 g/mol). Then, you can use Avogadro's number (6.022 x 10^23 atoms/mol) to calculate the number of atoms. So, 16 grams of CH4 contains approximately 6.022 x 10^23 atoms.
3.5 g CH4 x 1 mole/16 g x 6.02x10^23 molecules/mole x 4 H atoms/molecule = answer.
Methane (CH4) contains 1 carbon atom. The molecular mass of methane is approximately 16 g/mol.
First you must find the no. on moles in 1.6g of ch4. ie. ch4=C+h4=12+(1.008x4)=16.032 or 16 approx moles=1.6/16=0.1 No. of electrons=no. atoms ie. no of moles x 6.022x10^23 =0.1x 6.022x10^23 =>6.022 x 10^22(approx)
You have to divide 10 by molecular mass.Then get the answer.So the answer is 0.625
There are 16 carbon atoms in C16.
There are 16 atoms in 3CH4, which consists of 3 molecules of methane (CH4). Each methane molecule contains 5 atoms - one carbon atom and four hydrogen atoms. So, 3 molecules of CH4 contain a total of 3 carbon atoms and 12 hydrogen atoms, giving a total of 16 atoms.
To determine the number of atoms in 88.9 g of CH4, you need to first calculate the number of moles using the molar mass of CH4. The molar mass of CH4 is approximately 16 g/mol. After determining the number of moles, you can use Avogadro's number (6.022 x 10^23 atoms/mol) to find the number of atoms in the given mass.
The balanced equation for combustion of CH4 is CH4 + 2O2 ==> CO2 + 2H2OThus, one mole CH4 produces 1 mole CO21 g CH4 x 1 mole CH4/16 g = 0.0625 moles CH40.0625 moles CH4 ==> 0.0625 moles CO20.0625 moles CO2 x 44 g CO2/mole = 2.75 g CO2Thus, the answer would be that 1 grams of CH4 will produce 2.75 grams of CO2 after complete combustion.
3.5 g CH4 x 1 mole/16 g x 6.02x10^23 molecules/mole x 4 H atoms/molecule = answer.
200 g CH4 x 1 mole CH4/16 g = 12.5 moles CH4
To find the number of atoms in 64.5 grams of methane (CH4), you first need to calculate the moles of methane using its molar mass (16 g/mol). 64.5 g / 16 g/mol = 4.03 moles. Since 1 mole of methane contains 5.02 x 10^23 molecules, the total number of atoms will be 4.03 moles * 5.02 x 10^23 atoms/mole = 2.02 x 10^24 atoms.
Methane (CH4) contains 1 carbon atom. The molecular mass of methane is approximately 16 g/mol.
There are 1.52 x 10^24 molecules of CH4 in 2.52 mol of CH4.
First you must find the no. on moles in 1.6g of ch4. ie. ch4=C+h4=12+(1.008x4)=16.032 or 16 approx moles=1.6/16=0.1 No. of electrons=no. atoms ie. no of moles x 6.022x10^23 =0.1x 6.022x10^23 =>6.022 x 10^22(approx)
You have to divide 10 by molecular mass.Then get the answer.So the answer is 0.625
Divide 96 by molecular mass.So the answer is 6mol
There are 67.2 grams of hydrogen in 5.60 moles of methane. Methane (CH4) has one carbon atom and four hydrogen atoms, so the molar mass of CH4 is 16 grams/mol (carbon) + 4 grams/mol (hydrogen) = 20 grams/mol. In 5.60 moles of CH4, there are 5.60 moles x 4 mol of hydrogen/mol of CH4 = 22.4 moles of hydrogen. Finally, converting moles to grams, 22.4 moles x 1 gram/mol = 67.2 grams of hydrogen.