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Calculate the amount of moles in 1.17 x 1016 molecules of H2S.

User Kmikael
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1 Answer

4 votes

Answer:


\boxed {\boxed {\sf About \ 1.94 *10^(-8) \ mol \ H_2S}}

Step-by-step explanation:

To convert from molecules to moles, Avogadro's Number must be used.

  • 6.022* 10²³

This number tells us how many particles (atoms, ions, molecules, etc.) are in 1 mole of a substance. For this problem, it is moles of hydrogen sulfide.

  • 6.022*10²³ molecules of hydrogen sulfide in 1 mole.

We can use the number as a fraction.


\frac { 6.022 *10^(23) \ molecules \ H_2S}{1 \ mol \ H_2S}

Multiply by the given number of molecules.


1.17*10^(16) \ molecules \ H_2S *\frac { 6.022 *10^(23) \ molecules \ H_2S}{1 \ mol \ H_2S}

Flip the fraction so the molecules of hydrogen sulfide will cancel out.


1.17*10^(16) \ molecules \ H_2S *\frac {1 \ mol \ H_2S }{ 6.022 *10^(23) \ molecules \ H_2S}


1.17*10^(16) *\frac {1 \ mol \ H_2S }{ 6.022 *10^(23) }


\frac {1.17*10^(16) \ mol \ H_2S }{ 6.022 *10^(23) }


1.94287612*10^(-8) \ mol \ H_2S

The original measurement of molecules had 3 significant figures so we must round our answer to that.

For the number we calculated, that is the hundredth place. The 2 in the thousandth place tells us to leave the 4 in the hundredth place.


1.94 *10^(-8) \ mol \ H_2S

There are about 1.94*10⁻⁸ molecules of hydrogen sulfide.

User Jacek Glen
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