Consider a sample of 10.0 g of the gaseous hydrocarbon C2H6 to answer the following question: How many carbon atoms are present in this 10.0 g sample?
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Explanation:
Recall Avogadro's number of 6.02x1023 atoms/mole.
Let us first find the number of moles of C present in the sample.
moles of C2H6 = 10.0 g C2H6 x 1 mole C2H6 / 30.07 g = 0.33256 moles C2H6
Since there are 2 moles of C in each mole of C2H6, we can find the moles of C in the sample:
moles of C = 0.33256 moles C2H6 x 2 moles C/mol C2H6 = 0.66511 moles C
Using Avogadro's number, we can now find the number of C atoms in the sample:
0.66511 moles C x 6.02x1023 atoms/mole = 4.00x1023 C atoms (to 3 significant figures based on 10.0 g)
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