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Number of moles in 45 grams of glucose

User Hguser
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Answer:

To find the number of moles in a given amount of a substance, you can use the formula:

\[\text{Number of moles} = \frac{\text{Mass (in grams)}}{\text{Molar mass}}.\]

For glucose (\(C_6H_{12}O_6\)):

- The molar mass of carbon (\(C\)) is approximately \(12 \, \text{g/mol}\).

- The molar mass of hydrogen (\(H\)) is approximately \(1 \, \text{g/mol}\).

- The molar mass of oxygen (\(O\)) is approximately \(16 \, \text{g/mol}\).

Now, calculate the molar mass of glucose by adding up the molar masses of its individual atoms:

\[Molar \, mass_{\text{glucose}} = 6 \times (\text{molar mass}_{\text{carbon}}) + 12 \times (\text{molar mass}_{\text{hydrogen}}) + 6 \times (\text{molar mass}_{\text{oxygen}}).\]

Substitute the values and calculate:

\[Molar \, mass_{\text{glucose}} = 6 \times 12 + 12 \times 1 + 6 \times 16.\]

After finding the molar mass of glucose, you can use the formula to find the number of moles:

\[\text{Number of moles} = \frac{\text{Mass of glucose}}{\text{Molar mass}_{\text{glucose}}}.\]

Substitute the given mass of glucose (45 grams) and the calculated molar mass of glucose into the formula to find the number of moles.

User Bipen
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