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One million atoms of a particular element have a mass of 1.99 x 10 ^-17 grams.

- How many moles of this element are there?
- What is the molar mass of this element?
- What is the identity of this element?

2 Answers

4 votes

Answer:

Moles of this element =
1.660* 10^(-18) moles

The molar mass of this element is 12 g/mol.

Carbon is the identity of this element.

Step-by-step explanation:

Number of atom = 1,000,000

Number of atoms =
moles * N_A


1,000,000 =moles* 6.022* 10^(23)


moles=1.660* 10^(-18)

Moles of this element =
1.660* 10^(-18) moles

If
1.660* 10^(-18) moles weighs =
1.99 * 10^(-17) g

Then mass of 1 mol =
(1.99 * 10 ^(-17) g)/(1.660* 10^(-18))=11.98 g\approx 12 g

The molar mass of this element is 12 g/mol.

Carbon is the identity of this element.

User DurandA
by
8.1k points
3 votes
- How many moles of this element are there?
1000000 atoms ( 1 mol / 6.022x10^23 atoms ) = 1.66 x 10^-18 mol of the element

- What is the molar mass of this element?
Molar mass = 1.99 x 10 ^-17 grams / 1.66 x 10^-18 mol = 11.98 g/mol

- What is the identity of this element?
The identity most likely is closest to carbon which has a molar mass of 12.01 g/mol.
User Andrey Korneyev
by
8.0k points