Science, asked by navyanath71, 3 months ago

③ Calculate an object having Avogadro number of electrons in it. ​

Answers

Answered by abidislam2008
0

Answer:

The number of atoms of ANY substance in a volume is: # of atoms = N * (density) * volume / (Molecular Weight). N is a constant called Avogadro's number and its equal to 6.022*1023 atoms/mole. It can also be molecules per mole.

Answered by Jiya2943
61

Explanation:

  • The mole allows scientists to calculate the number of elementary entities (usually atoms or molecules) in a certain mass of a given substance.
  • Avogadro’s number is an absolute number: there are 6.022×1023 elementary entities in 1 mole. This can also be written as 6.022×1023 mol-1.
  • The mass of one mole of a substance is equal to that substance’s molecular weight. For example, the mean molecular weight of water is 18.015 atomic mass units (amu), so one mole of water weight 18.015 grams.
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