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If the density of your unknown liquid is 0.65 g/ml, calculate the volume in liters that 3 ml of your unknown liquid would occupy when vaporized at the barometric pressure and temperature of your boiling water bath in run 1. use the accepted molar mass of your suspected unknown.c

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1. If the density of your unknown liquid is 0.65 g/mL, calculate the volume in liters that 3 mL of your unknown liquid would occupy when vaporized at the barometric pressure and temperature of your boiling water bath in Run 1. Use the accepted molar mass of your suspected unknown: (0/1pts) Volume occupied when vaporized (L_ 3x0.65 (-1.0 pts) Incorrect. Convert from volume of liquid to moles of unknown using the density; 0.65 g.mL, and accepted molar mass for the suspected unknown: Do not use your experimentally determined molar mass. Once you have determined the moles of unknown; use the ideal gas law to determine the volume in liters that the gas will occupy once vaporized. Make sure to use the temperature of the water bath from Run 1 in Kelvin and the barometric pressure you recorded, in atm: (1/1pts) Based on the volume of the flask (L) from run 1, was 3 mL sufficient liquid to use in your experiment? yes

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