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A chemistry student needs 50.0 g of glycerol for an experiment. By consulting the CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, the student discovers that thedensity of glycerol is 1.26 g•cm^-3. Calculate the volume of glycerol the student should pour out.Be sure your answer has the correct number of significant digits.

User EmandM
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1 Answer

24 votes
24 votes

In order to find the volume of glycerol the student should pour out, we need to know the relation between its mass M, its volume V, and its density d:

V = M/d

Now, observe that:

M = 50.0 g

d = 1.26 g * cm-³ (this means each cubic centimeter of the substance contains 1.26 g)

Then, we can use those values in the formula for the volume:


V=(50.0g)/(1.26g\cdot cm^(-3))=(50.0)/(1.26)cm^3\cong39.68cm^3

Notice that the number of significant figures of each given measure is 3 (the zero after the dot in 50.0 also counts as a significant figure).

Therefore, the answer with the correct number of significant figures is:

39.7 cm³

User Hopewell Mutanda
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