Number of moles of electrons in 0.5 mol N3-ions will be
Answers
Answered by
0
There are 5 electrons in 0.5 moles of N3. This is due to the fact that one nitride ion has ten electrons.
How do you find the number of moles of electrons?
- When converting coulombs to moles of electrons, use the formula: moles of electrons = coulombs / F = 6.673 x 102 / 96487 = 6.916 x 10-3 mol, where one mole of H2 requires two moles of electrons to produce. 96.65 kPa = (725.1 / 760.0) x 101.3 kPa.
- The Avogadro constant, L, electrons are included in one mole of electrons, which is 6.02 x 1023 electrons.
- In a neutral atom, the number of protons equals the amount of electrons. The total of the amount of protons and neutrons in the nucleus equals the atom's mass number (M). The difference between the atomic mass number (M) and the atomic number (N) equals the number of neutrons (Z).
#SPJ2
Similar questions
Math,
4 months ago
Math,
4 months ago
Math,
4 months ago
Science,
1 year ago
Computer Science,
1 year ago