Chemistry, asked by Mallakishan94, 10 months ago

How much electrons are there one coulomb of charge??

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
47

\sf{According\;to\;Quantisation\;of\;charge,\;we\;know\;that,}

\sf{Q=ne}

\sf{Therefore,\;1\;coulomb\;charge=n\;.\;1.6 \times 10^{-19}}

\sf{\implies \dfrac{1}{1.6\times 10^{-19}} =n}

\sf{So,\;n=6.25\times 10^{18}}

Answered by tanu6194
0

Explanation:

  • A single electron has a charge of 1.60217733 × 10-19 coulombs. A collection of 6.2415×1018 has charge one coulomb (1/1.60217733×10-19)1.6 into 10 raise of power-19 no of electrons are present in one coulomb of charge
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