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A raindrop has a mass of 50. mg and the Pacific Ocean has a mass of 7.08 X 10^20 kg. Use this information to answer the questions below. Be sure your answers have the correct number of significant digits. What is the mass of 1 mole of raindrops? Round your answer to 2 significant digits. How many moles of raindrops are in the Pacific Ocean? Round your answer to 2 significant digits.

User Psabbate
by
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1 Answer

6 votes

Step-by-step explanation:

It is known that according to mole concept, 1 mole of every substance contains
6.022 * 10^(23) atoms.

Therefore, mass of 1 mole of raindrops is as follows.

Mass of 1 mole raindrops = mass of 1 rain drop × Avogadro's number

=
50 * 6.022 * 10^(23)

=
301.1 * 10^(23) mg

or, =
3.0 * 10^(22) (as 1 mg = 0.001 g)

Therefore, mass of 1 mole of raindrops is
3.0 * 10^(22) g.

Now, the mass of Pacific ocean is calculated as follows.

Mass of Pacific ocean =
\frac{\text{mass of pacific ocean}}{\text{mass of 1 mole of raindrops}}

As 1 kg = 1000 g. So, mass of Pacific ocean will be
7.08 * 10^(20) kg equal to
7.08 * 10^(23) g.

Hence, moles of raindrops will be calculated as follows.

Mass of Pacific ocean =
\frac{\text{mass of pacific ocean}}{\text{mass of 1 mole of raindrops}}

=
(7.08 * 10^(23))/(3.0 * 10^(22))

= 24 moles

Therefore, we can conclude that 24 moles of raindrops are in the Pacific Ocean.

User Apurv Thakkar
by
8.4k points
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