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Mass fraction of sulfur and oxygen in the crust are respectively

0.52 and 0.295. How many times is the number of oxygen atoms in the Earth's crust
More sulfur atoms?

1 Answer

6 votes
First, we divide the mass fraction of each element by their corresponding molar mass:
0.52 / 32.1 = 0.0162
0.285 / 16 = 0.0184

Next, we simply divide the values that we get:
0.0184/0.0162 = 1.14

So, the there are 1.14 times more oxygen atoms than sulfur atoms in the Earth's crust.
User Patrik Fuhrmann
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