Chemistry, asked by sreejaa774, 7 months ago

90 g glucose molecules mass​

Answers

Answered by preetisinghkrishna
0

Explanation:

In order to determine how many atoms of carbon you get in

90

grams of glucose you need to know two things

how many molecules you have in

90

grams of glucose

how many atoms of carbon you have per molecule of glucose

So, glucose's molecular formula is

C

6

H

12

O

6

, which means that every molecule of glucose contains

six carbon atoms

twelve hydrogen atoms

six oxygen atoms

Now that you know how many atoms of carbon you get per molecule of glucose, all you need to figure out is how many molecules of glucose you get in that sample.

To do that, use glucose's molar mass, which tells you what the mass of one mole of glucose molecules is. Glucose has a molar mass of

180.156 g/mol

, which means that one mole of glucose molecules has a mass of

180.156 g

.

Therefore, your

90-g

sample will contain

90

g

1 mole C

6

H

12

O

6

180.156

g

=

0.4996 moles C

5

H

12

O

6

As you know, the number of molecules you get per mole is given by Avogadro's number. More specifically, one mole of any substance contains exactly

6.022

10

23

molecules of that substance.

This means that you have

0.4996

moles

6.022

10

23

molecules

1

mole

=

3.009

10

23

molecules

So, if you know how many molecules of glucose you have, and how many atoms of carbon you have per molecule, you can say that

3.009

10

23

molecules C

6

H

12

O

6

6 atoms of C

1

molecule C

6

H

12

O

6

=1.81

10

24

atoms of C

You should round this off to one sig fig, the number of sig figs you have for the mass of glucose

no. of atoms of C =2⋅10/24

I hope it will help you

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