What is gas stoichiometry?
Answers
Stoichiometric calculations involving gases allow us to convert between mass, number of moles, and most importantly, volume of gases. The following relationship makes this possible: 1 mole of any gas at standard temperature and pressure (273 K and 1 atm) occupies a volume of 22.4 L.
Answer:
stoichiometry is a kind of math that helps you measure and calculate amounts of chemicals. There are several quantity units used in stoichiometry. Some of them, like grams and liters, will be familiar even to people who have not studied chemistry. One unit, the mole, is generally only used in a chemistry setting. A mole is a counting unit, like a dozen or a score. A mole is approximately 6.022×1023 units. That is the number of atoms in exactly 12 grams of carbon-12, but it can apply to any atom, molecule, or particle.