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3. How many particles are present in 13.4 moles of carbon dioxide?

8.07. 1024 particles
04.49. 1022 particles
6.02. 1024 particles
6.02. 1023 particles

User Man Zet
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1 Answer

2 votes

Answer:


\boxed {\boxed {\sf 8.07 *10^(24) \ particles}}

Step-by-step explanation:

To convert from moles to representative particles, Avogadro's number: 6.02*10²³ is used. This number tells us the amount of particles in 1 mole of a substance. We can use it as a ratio.


\frac {6.02*10^(23) \ particles}{1 \ mol \ CO_2}}

Multiply by the given number of moles.


13.4 \ mol \ CO_2 *\frac {6.02*10^(23) \ particles}{1 \ mol \ CO_2}}

The moles of carbon dioxide will cancel out.


13.4 *\frac {6.02*10^(23) \ particles}{1}}

The denominator of 1 can be ignored and this becomes a simple multiplication problem.


13.4 * {6.02*10^(23) \ particles


8.0668*10^(24) \ particles

The original number of moles has 3 significant figures, so our answer must have the same. For the number we calculated, that is the hundredth place. The 6 in the thousandth place tells us round the 6 to a 7.


8.07 *10^(24) \ particles

13.4 moles of carbon dioxide has approximately 8.07*10²⁴ particles.

User Cory Nelson
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