Chemistry, asked by samtmald, 9 months ago

The compound K 2 O 2 also exists. A chemist can determine the mass of K in a sample of known mass that consists of either pure K 2 O or pure K 2 O 2 . From this information, can the chemist answer the question of which compound is in the sample? Indicate yes or no, and explain.

Answers

Answered by nidaeamann
6

Answer:

Yes it is possible for chemist to know

Explanation:

The solution is based on the principle that each product or mixture of K2O or K2O2 will have different proportion of K and this would be the differentiating factor.

For example, percentage of K in K2O is 83 while the percentage of K in K2O2 is 71.

Now if the chemist can measure how much K is there in the mixture, then he can use this data to compare with the percentages stated above.

For example, if K has 83 percentage in mixture, it means it is K2O

Answered by Jasleen0599
2

Yes, it is possible for chemist to know which compound is in the sample.

- The chemist knows the mass of the given sample.

- He can determine the mass of K in it.

- From this information, he can calculate the ratio of K and O in the sample.

- Hence he can determine which compound (K₂O or K₂O₂) is present in the sample.

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