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What is the total negative charge, in coulombs, of all the electrons in a small 1.20 g sphere of carbon? One mole of C is 12.0g, and each atom contains 6 protons and 6 electrons.

Attempted to calculate the total number of electrons first and then using that to calculate the total negative charge. Came out with 8475.4, but MP says it is wrong.

User TonyY
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1 Answer

1 vote

Answer:

-57792 C

Step-by-step explanation:

Recall that in one mole of a substance there are an Avogadro number of molecules. That is:


6.02\,\,\,10^(23) molecules

therefore, in 1.2 g, there would be ten times less molecules than in the 12.0 g mole, that is:
6.02\,\,\,10^(22) molecules.

Now, each C there are 6 negative charges, then, the number of electrons will be six times the number of C molecules, that is:


6\,*\,6.02\,\,\,10^(23)=36.12\,\,\,10^(22) =3.612\,\,\,10^(23) electrons.

Now we multiply this number times the charge of an electron
(1.6\,\,\,10^(-19)\,C), and we obtained the total negative charge of the carbon sample:

Total negative charge is:
5.7792\,\,10^(4)\,C=57792\,\,C

therefore the total negative charge is: -57792 C

User Chen Li Yong
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