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Molarity..ish
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Hi,
Im stuck doing some calculations, and I was wondering if anyone could help me? The question is: If 200ml of 0.1M sodium cholride solution was evaporated to dryness, how much NaCl would be present? (a) In moles and (b) In g?
I dont know where to start with this question, so if the workings out could be shown I would be very grateful!
Thanks
Im stuck doing some calculations, and I was wondering if anyone could help me? The question is: If 200ml of 0.1M sodium cholride solution was evaporated to dryness, how much NaCl would be present? (a) In moles and (b) In g?
I dont know where to start with this question, so if the workings out could be shown I would be very grateful!
Thanks
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by looneych00n. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.OK. Firstly;
A mole of s substance is the relative molecular mass 'formulaic mass', or that of the simplest ionic lattice in grams.
A 1M solution contains I mole of solute dissolved in a litre of solute.
So, looneych00n, how many grams of sodium chloride (NaCl) are there in a litre of 1M sodium chloride solution?
(R.A.M Na = 23
R.A.M Cl = 35)
A mole of s substance is the relative molecular mass 'formulaic mass', or that of the simplest ionic lattice in grams.
A 1M solution contains I mole of solute dissolved in a litre of solute.
So, looneych00n, how many grams of sodium chloride (NaCl) are there in a litre of 1M sodium chloride solution?
(R.A.M Na = 23
R.A.M Cl = 35)
Well, yes, the sodium chloride is still there whether you evaporate the solution or not.
But by doing so, you can demonstrate that your calculations are correct by weighing just the sodium chloride directly -otherwise you would only be able to weigh the sodium chloride and the water- which wouldn't tell you much.
So come on, how many grams of NaCl in a litre of 1M?
But by doing so, you can demonstrate that your calculations are correct by weighing just the sodium chloride directly -otherwise you would only be able to weigh the sodium chloride and the water- which wouldn't tell you much.
So come on, how many grams of NaCl in a litre of 1M?
No.
A mole of NaCl = RAM (Na) + RAM (Cl) in grams
= 23 + 35.5 = 58.5g
A 1M solution of NaCl is a mole of NaCL dissolved in a litre of water.
So a litre of 1M NaCl solution contains 58g of NaCl (which you could weigh for yourself in a lab if you evaporated off the water.)
Your solution is only 0.1M, so how many grams of NaCl in that?
A mole of NaCl = RAM (Na) + RAM (Cl) in grams
= 23 + 35.5 = 58.5g
A 1M solution of NaCl is a mole of NaCL dissolved in a litre of water.
So a litre of 1M NaCl solution contains 58g of NaCl (which you could weigh for yourself in a lab if you evaporated off the water.)
Your solution is only 0.1M, so how many grams of NaCl in that?
That's right. Moles x RAM = mass in grams
Ok, here's the easy way of looking at it;
There is 1 mole of NaCl in 1 litre (1l.) of 1M NaCL solution,
Therefore, there is 0.1 moles of NaCl in 1l. of 0.1M solution
You only have 200ml of 0.1M NaCl solution, (There are 1000 ml in a litre, so 200ml is 200/1000 or 0.2l.).
So there must be;
0.1 x 200/1000
= 0.02 moles NaCl in 200ml of 0.1M NaCl solution. (part a. answer)
So if a mole of NaCl = 58.5g (RAM (Na) + RAM (Cl) = 23 + 35.5 = 58.5 g)
then how much is 0.02 moles of NaCl in grams?
Ok, here's the easy way of looking at it;
There is 1 mole of NaCl in 1 litre (1l.) of 1M NaCL solution,
Therefore, there is 0.1 moles of NaCl in 1l. of 0.1M solution
You only have 200ml of 0.1M NaCl solution, (There are 1000 ml in a litre, so 200ml is 200/1000 or 0.2l.).
So there must be;
0.1 x 200/1000
= 0.02 moles NaCl in 200ml of 0.1M NaCl solution. (part a. answer)
So if a mole of NaCl = 58.5g (RAM (Na) + RAM (Cl) = 23 + 35.5 = 58.5 g)
then how much is 0.02 moles of NaCl in grams?
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