53.2k views
3 votes
How many moles of gold is 9.75 x 10^24 atoms?

User KayV
by
7.9k points

2 Answers

3 votes

Answer:

1 Answer. You use the fact that 1 mole of any substance contains exactly 6.022⋅1023 atoms or molecules of that substance - this is known as Avogadro's number. In your case, 1 mole of gold will have exactly 6.022⋅1023 atoms of gold.

Step-by-step explanation:

User Takharsh
by
8.1k points
3 votes

Answer:


\boxed {\boxed {\sf 1.62 \ mol \ Au}}

Step-by-step explanation:

We are asked to convert atoms to moles.

1. Avogadro's Number

We know that 1 mole of any substance contains the same number of particles (atoms, molecules, formula units etc.) This is Avogadro's Number: 6.022*10²³. For this question, the particles are atoms of gold (Au).

2. Convert Atoms to Moles

Let's set up a proportion using this information.


\frac {6.022*10^(23) \ atoms \ Au}{1 \ mol \ Au}

Since we are solving for the moles in 9.75 * 10²⁴ atoms, we multiply by that number.


9.75*10^(24) \ atoms \ Au*\frac {6.022*10^(23) \ atoms \ Au}{1 \ mol \ Au}

Flip the proportion. It will be equivalent, but the units of "atoms Au" can cancel.


9.75*10^(24) \ atoms \ Au*\frac {1 \ mol \ Au}{6.022*10^(23) \ atoms \ Au}


9.75*10^(24) *\frac {1 \ mol \ Au}{6.022*10^(23)}

Condense the problem into 1 fraction.


\frac {9.75*10^(24) }{6.022*10^(23)}\ mol \ Au


1.619063434 \ mol \ Au

3. Round

The original measurement (9.75) has 3 significant figures. Our answer must have the same. For the number we found, that is the hundredth place.

  • 1.619063434

The 9 in the thousandth place tells us to round the 1 to a 2 in the hundredth place.


1.62 \ mol \ Au

9.75 * 10²⁴ atoms of gold is approximately equal to 1.62 moles of gold.

User Localacct
by
7.6k points

No related questions found

Welcome to QAmmunity.org, where you can ask questions and receive answers from other members of our community.