Chemistry, asked by luhar05, 16 days ago

My teacher told me that the coefficients of molecules in the chemical reaction indicate the number of moles of that particular molecule... I am confused with it... Can someone explain me???​

Answers

Answered by crankybirds30
4

Answer:

what we have to do in this please tell

Answered by BrainlySrijanunknown
5

Answer:

The coefficients are a ratio. For every two unit of hydrogen molecule, you need one unit of oxygen molecule, and the result is two unit of water molecule.

That unit is often the particle itself, whether it's an atom, a metal ion, a more substantial molecule or even a protein or enzyme. It can also be the volume (for ideal gases under the same conditions), the moles used in reaction, or molarity in solution.

Simply remember that the coefficient applies to the item following it as a whole. As long as the ratio between coefficients is the same, you can use any unit that maintains it.

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