151k views
3 votes
How many moles of f_2 are in 3.7•10^25 molecules of f_2

1 Answer

4 votes

For
3.7 * \(10^(25)\) molecules of
\(F_2\), there are approximately 61.56 moles of
\(F_2\) based on Avogadro's number, which relates the number of entities to moles.

To determine the number of moles in a given number of molecules, you can use Avogadro's number, which defines the number of entities (atoms, molecules, etc.) in one mole. Avogadro's number is approximately
\(6.022 * 10^(23)\) entities/mol.

In this case, you have
3.7 * \(10^(25)\) molecules of
\(F_2\). To find the number of moles, use the formula:


\[ \text{Number of moles} = \frac{\text{Number of molecules}}{\text{Avogadro's number}}. \]

Substitute the values:


\[ \text{Number of moles} = (3.7 * 10^(25))/(6.022 * 10^(23)). \]

Calculating this yields the number of moles of
\(F_2\) molecules.


\[ \text{Number of moles} \approx 61.56 \text{ moles of } F_2. \]

User Imti
by
7.7k points