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A 2.0% (w/v) solution of sodium hydrogen citrate, Na2C6H6O7, which also contains 2.5% (w/v) of dextrose, C6H12O6, is used as an anticoagulant for blood which is to be used for transfusions. What is the molarity of the sodium hydrogen citrate in the solution

User Haru Atari
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2 Answers

12 votes

Answer:

0.085M

Step-by-step explanation:

Molecular weight of sodium hydrogen citrate=236.09 g

236.09 g of Na2C6H6O7 in 1000ml= 1 M

2%= 2 g in 1 litre (1000ml)

20/236.09=0.0847 M=0.085 M

User Skymt
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3 votes

Answer:

0.0847M is molarity of sodium hydrogen citrate in the solution

Step-by-step explanation:

The 2.0%(w/v) solution of sodium hydrogen citrate contains 2g of the solute in 100mL of solution. To find the molarity of the solution we need to convert the mass of solute to moles using molar mass and the mL of solution to Liters because molarity is the ratio between moles of sodium hydrogen citrate and liters of solution.

Moles Na2C6H6O7:

Molar Mass:

2Na: 2*22.99g/mol: 45.98g/mol

6C: 6*12.01g/mol: 72.01g/mol

6H: 6*1.008g/mol: 6.048g/mol

7O: 7*16g/mol: 112g/mol

45.98g/mol + 72.01g/mol + 6.048g/mol + 112g/mol = 236.038g/mol

Moles of 2g:

2g * (1mol / 236.038g) = 8.473x10⁻³ moles

Liters solution:

100mL * (1L / 1000mL) = 0.100L

Molarity:

8.473x10⁻³ moles / 0.100L =

0.0847M is molarity of sodium hydrogen citrate in the solution

User Mikolajbe
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