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CH 4
CH 4
Ar 2+, is likely to be deflected most in the magnetic field? Give a reason for
your answer.
AE1.
a
b
36
18
36
18
Q1.m
Use the data in Table 4.2 on page 55 to calculate the relative atomic mass of:
a oxygen
b silver
c hydrogen
A1.
(15.995 99.76) (16.999 0.04) (17.999 0.20)
100
= 15.999
Ar(O) =
Ar(Ag) =
Ar(H) =
Q2.
The element lithium has two isotopes:
6Li has a relative isotopic mass of 6.02.
7Li has a relative isotopic mass of 7.02.
The relative atomic mass of lithium is 6.94. Calculate the percentage abundance of the
lighter isotope.
A2.
Let the percentage abundance of the lighter isotope be x%.
percentage abundance of the heavier isotope will be (100 x)%.
6.94 =
x = 8.0
proportion of the lighter isotope = 8.0%
Q3.
Calculate the relative molecular masses of:
a sulfuric acid (H2SO4)
b ammonia (NH3)
c ethane (C2H6)
A3.
a
Q4.
Calculate the relative formula mass of:
a potassium chloride (KCl)
b sodium carbonate (Na2CO3)
c aluminium sulfate (Al2(SO4)3)
A4.
a
Q5.
Calculate the number of:
a atoms in 2.0 mol of sodium atoms (Na)
b molecules in 0.10 mol of nitrogen molecules (N2)
c atoms in 20.0 mol of carbon atoms (C)
d molecules in 4.2 mol of water molecules (H2O)
e atoms in 1.0 102 mol of iron atoms (Fe)
f molecules in 4.62 105 mol of CO2 molecules
A5.
Number of particles = amount (mol) NA
a Number of sodium atoms (Na) = 2.0 6.02 1023
= 1.2 1024
b Number of nitrogen molecules (N2) = 0.10 6.02 1023
= 6.02 1022
c Number of carbon atoms (C) = 20.0 6.02 1023
= 1.20 1025
d Number of water molecules (H2O) = 4.2 6.02 1023
= 2.5 1024
e Number of iron atoms (Fe) = 1.0 102 6.02 1023
= 6.0 1021
f Number of CO2 molecules = 4.62 105 6.02 1023
= 2.78 1019
Q6.
Calculate the amount of substance (in mol) represented by:
a 3.0 1023 molecules of water (H2O)
b 1.5 1023 atoms of neon (Ne)
c 4.2 1025 atoms of iron (Fe)
d 4.2 1025 molecules of ethanol (C2H5OH)
A6.
Remember: Avogadros number, NA, is 6.02 1023.
Amount (mol) =
number of particles
NA
3.0 1023
NA
= 0.5 mol
b
1.5 1023
Amount (Ne atoms) =
NA
= 0.25 mol
4.2 1025
NA
= 70 mol
d
4.2 1025
Amount (C2H5OH molecules) =
NA
= 70 mol
Q7.
Calculate the amount (in mol) of:
a sodium atoms represented by 1.0 1020 sodium atoms
b aluminium represented by 1.0 1020 aluminium atoms
c chlorine molecules represented by 1.0 1020 chlorine molecules
A7.
Remember: Avogadros number, NA, is 6.02 1023.
Amount (mol) =
number of particles
NA
1.0 1020
NA
1.0 1020
NA
1.0 1020
Amount (Cl2 molecules) =
NA
= 1.7 104 mol
Q8.
Calculate the amount (in mol) of:
a chlorine atoms in 0.4 mol of chlorine (Cl2)
b hydrogen atoms in 1.2 mol of methane (CH4)
c hydrogen atoms in 0.12 mol of ethane (C2H6)
d oxygen atoms in 1.5 mol of sodium sulfate (Na2SO4)
A8.
a
Q9.
Calculate the molar mass of:
a nitrogen (N2)
b ammonia (NH3)
c sulfuric acid (H2SO4)
d iron(III) nitrate (Fe(NO3)3)
e acetic acid (CH3COOH)
f sulfur atoms (S)
g vitamin C (ascorbic acid C6H8O6)
h hydrated copper(II) sulfate (CuSO4.5H2O)
A9.
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
M(N2) = 2 14.007
= 28.0 g mol1
M(NH3) = (1 14.007) + (3 1.008)
= 17.0 g mol1
M(H2SO4) = (2 1.008) + (1 32.064) + (4 15.994)
= 98.1 g mol1
M(Fe(NO3)3) = (1 55.847) + (3 14.007) + (9 15.994)
= 242 g mol1
M(CH3COOH) = (4 1.008) + (2 12.012) + (2 15.994)
= 60.0 g mol1
M(S) = (1 32.1)
= 32.1 g mol1
M(C6H8O6) = (6 12.012) + (8 1.008) + (6 15.994)
= 176.1 g mol1
M(CuSO4.5H2O) = (1 63.54) + (1 32.064) + (4 15.994) + (5 18.01)
= 250 g mol1
Q10.
Calculate the mass of:
a 1.0 mol of sodium atoms (Na)
b 2.0 mol of oxygen molecules (O2)
c 0.10 mol of methane molecules (CH4)
d 0.25 mol of aluminium oxide (Al2O3)
A10.
It is useful to remember the formula m = nM, where m is the mass in grams, n the
amount of substance in mol, and M the molar mass. Use a periodic table to work out
the molar masses.
a m(Na atoms) = 1.0 mol 23 g mol1
= 23.0 g
b m(O2) = 2.0 mol 32.0 g mol1
= 64.0 g
c m(CH4) = 0.10 mol 16.0 g mol1
= 1.60 g
d m(Al2O3) = 0.25 mol 102 g mol1
= 25.5 g
Q11.
Calculate the amount, in mol, of:
a H atoms in 5 g of hydrogen
b H2 molecules in 5 g of hydrogen
c Al atoms in 2.7 g of aluminium
d CH4 molecules in 0.4 g of methane
e O atoms in 0.10 g of oxygen
f O2 molecules in 0.10 g of oxygen
g P atoms in 1.2 103 g of phosphorus
h P4 molecules in 1.2 103 g of phosphorus
A11.
m
, where m is the mass in grams, n the
M
amount of substance in mol, and M the molar mass. Use a periodic table to work out
the molar masses.
5
a n(H atoms) = = 5 mol
1
5
= 2.5 mol
2
n(H2) =
n(Al atoms) =
n(CH4) =
n(O atoms) =
n(O2) =
n(P atoms) =
1.2 103
n(P4) =
= 9.7 106 mol
124
2 .7
= 0.10 mol
27
0 .4
= 0.025 mol
16
0.10
= 0.0063 mol
16
0.10
= 0.0031 mol
32
1.2 103
= 3.9 105 mol
31
Q12.
Calculate the number of atoms in:
a 23 g of sodium (Na)
b 4.0 g of argon (Ar)
c 0.243 g of magnesium (Mg)
d 10.0 g of gold (Au)
A12.
Use the formulas: Number of particles = n NA, where NA = 6.02 1023 and n =
where m is the mass in grams, n the amount of substance in mol, and M the molar
mass. Use a periodic table to work out the molar masses.
23
a n(Na) =
= 1.0 mol
23
Number of Na atoms = 1.0 6.0 1023 = 6.0 1023 atoms
b
n(Ar) =
4 .0
= 0.10 mol
39.95
n(Mg) =
0.243
= 0.01 mol
24.3
n(Au) =
10.0
= 0.051 mol
196 .97
m
M ,
A13.
Use the formulas: Number of particles = n NA, where NA = 6.02 1023, and n =
where m is the mass in grams, n the amount of substance in mol, and M the molar
mass. Use a periodic table to work out the molar masses.
a
n(O2) =
16
= 0.5 mol
32
n(N2) =
2 .8
= 0.1 mol
28
n(SO2) =
3 .2
= 0.05 mol
64
n(NH3) =
288
= 16.9 mol
17
m
,
M
10
A14.
a
2 55 .8 100
159 .6
= 69.9%
b
%(U) =
= 84.8%
c
%(N) =
14 100
53 .5
= 26.2%
d
%(O) =
6 16 100
187 .5
= 51.2%
Q15.
Determine the empirical formula of the compounds with the following compositions:
a 2.74% hydrogen, 97.26% chlorine
b 42.9% carbon, 57.1% oxygen
c 10.0 g of a compound of magnesium and oxygen that contains 6.03 g of
magnesium
d 3.2 g of a hydrocarbon that contains 2.4 g of carbon
A15.
a
Amount using n =
H
2.74 g
1 g mol1
2.74
n=
= 2.74 mol
1
2.74
=1
2.74
1
Cl
97.26 g
35.5 g mol1
97.26
n=
= 2.74 mol
35.5
2.74
=1
2.74
1
11
b
Mass
Molar mass
m
M
Divide all by the smallest
amount
Round off to whole numbers
Amount, using n =
C
42.9 g
12 g mol1
42 .9
n=
= 3.575 mol
12
3.575
=1
3.57
1
O
57.1 g
16 g mol1
57 .1
n=
= 3.57 mol
16
3.57
=1
3.57
1
empirical formula is CO
c
When 6.03 g is the mass of magnesium in 10.0 g of the compound, the mass of
oxygen is (10.0 6.03) = 3.97 g.
Mass
Molar mass
m
M
Divide all by the smallest
amount
Round off to whole numbers
Amount, using n =
Mg
6.03 g
24.3 g mol1
6.03
n=
= 0.248 mol
24 .3
0.248
=1
0.248
1
O
3.97 g
16 g mol1
3.97
n=
= 0.248 mol
16
0.248
=1
0.248
1
When 2.4 g is the mass of carbon in 3.2 g of the hydrocarbon, the mass of
hydrogen is (3.2 2.4) = 0.8 g.
Mass
Molar mass
m
M
Divide all by the smallest
amount
Round off to whole numbers
Amount, using n =
C
2.4 g
12 g mol1
2 .4
n=
= 0.2 mol
12
0 .2
=1
0 .2
1
H
0.8 g
1 g mol1
0 .8
n=
= 0.8 mol
1
0 .8
=4
0 .2
4
12
Q16.
Determine the molecular formula of each compound in the table below.
Table 4.8
Empirical formula
CH
HO
CH2O
NO2
CH2
a
b
c
d
e
A16.
a
13
Q17.
A hydrocarbon contains 85.7% carbon. Its relative molecular mass is 70.
a Determine the empirical formula of the hydrocarbon.
b Determine the molecular formula of the hydrocarbon.
A17.
a
Amount, using n =
H
14.3 g
1 g mol1
14 .3
n=
= 14.3 mol
1
14 .3
=2
7.14
2
C
85.7 g
12 g mol1
85 .7
n=
= 7.14 mol
12
7.14
=1
7.14
1
Q18.
A sample of the carbohydrate glucose contains 1.8 g carbon, 0.3 g hydrogen and 2.4 g
oxygen. Calculate the empirical formula of the compound. Deduce its molecular
formula, given that its relative molecular mass is 180.
14
A18.
The molecular formula is always a whole-number multiple of the empirical formula.
The empirical formula provides the simplest whole-number ratio of atoms in a
m
compound. The number of moles of each atom is found by using n =
, where m is
M
the mass in grams and M is the molar mass in g mol1.
Mass
Molar mass
Amount, using n =
Divide all by the
smallest amount
Round off to whole
numbers
m
M
C
1.8 g
12 g mol1
1 .8
n=
= 0.15 mol
12
0.15
=1
0.15
H
0.3 g
1 g mol1
0 .3
n=
= 0.30 mol
1
0.30
=2
0.15
O
2.4 g
16 g mol1
2 .4
n=
= 0.15 mol
16
0.15
=1
0.15
Chapter review
Q19.
The standard on which all relative masses are based is the 12C isotope, which is given
a mass of 12 exactly. Explain why then, in the table of relative atomic masses in
Appendix 4 on page 489, the relative atomic mass of carbon is listed as 12.011.
A19.
The relative atomic mass of carbon is the weighted average of the isotopic masses of
all carbon isotopes (i.e. 12C, 13C and 14C). Small amounts of 13C and 14C make this
average slightly greater than 12, the relative isotopic mass of the 12C isotope.
15
Q20.
When a sample of palladium is placed in a mass spectrometer, the following peaks are
recorded at the relative atomic masses and corresponding percentage abundances
given in the table.
Relative isotopic mass
Percentage abundance
101.9049
0.9600%
103.9036
10.97%
104.9046
22.23%
105.9032
27.33%
107.9039
26.71%
109.9044
11.80%
Calculate the relative atomic mass of palladium.
A20.
Ar(Pd) =
101.9049 0.96 103.9036 10.97 104.9046 22.23 105.9032 27.33 107.9039 26.71 109.9044 11.80
100
= 106.4
Q21.
The following table gives isotopic composition data for argon and potassium.
Element
Argon
Atomic
number
18
Potassium
19
a
b
A21.
a
Ar(Ar) =
Ar(K) =
Although potassium atoms have one more proton than argon atoms, the most
abundant isotope of argon has 22 neutrons, giving it a relative atomic mass close
to 40. The most abundant isotope of potassium has only 20 neutrons, giving it a
relative atomic mass close to 39.
16
Q22.
The relative atomic mass of rubidium is 85.47. The relative isotopic masses of its two
isotopes are 84.94 and 86.94. Calculate the relative abundances of the isotopes in
naturally occurring rubidium.
A22.
Let the percentage abundance of the lighter isotope be x%.
percentage abundance of the heavier isotope will be (100 x)%.
85.47 =
x = 26.5
proportion of the isotopes are 26.5% and 73.5%.
Q23.
Determine the percentage abundance of the lighter isotope of each of the following
elements.
a Gallium: relative isotopic masses 68.95 and 70.95, respectively; Ar = 69.72
b Boron: relative isotopic masses 10.02 and 11.01, respectively; Ar = 10.81
A23.
a
x = 61.5
proportion of the lighter isotope = 61.5%
b
Q24.
What is the relative molecular mass (Mr) of the following?
a water (H2O)
b white phosphorus (P4)
c carbon monoxide (CO)
A24.
a
b
c
The relative molecular mass, Mr, is the sum of the relative atomic masses, Ar, of
the elements in the compound.
Mr(H2O) = 2 + 16
= 18
Mr(P4) = 4 + 31
= 124
Mr(CO) = 12 + 16
= 28
17
Q25.
How would the molar mass (M) of a compound differ from its relative molecular mass
(Mr)?
A25.
The molar mass, M, has the same numerical value as the relative molecular mass, Mr,
which is the sum of the relative atomic masses, Ar, of the elements in the compound.
The molar mass, M, is the actual mass of one mole and so has the unit g mol1.
Q26.
What is the molar mass (M) of each of the following?
a iron (Fe)
b sulfuric acid (H2SO4)
c sodium oxide (Na2O)
d zinc nitrate (Zn(NO3)2)
e glycine (H2NCH2COOH)
f aluminium sulfate (Al2(SO4)3)
g hydrated iron(III) chloride (FeCl3.6H2O)
A26.
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
55.8 g mol1
Mr(H2SO4) = 2 + 32 + 64 = 98
M(H2SO4) = 98 g mol1
Mr(Na2O) = (2 23) + 16 = 62
M(Na2O) = 62 g mol1
Mr(Zn(NO3)2) = 65.4 + (2 14) + (6 16) = 189.4
M(Zn(NO3)2) = 189.4 g mol1
Mr(H2NCH2COOH) = (5 1) + 14 + (2 12) + (2 16) = 75
M(H2NCH2COOH) = 75.0 g mol1
Mr(Al2(SO4)3) = (2 27) + (3 32) + (12 16) = 342
M(Al2(SO4)3) = 342 g mol1
Mr(FeCl3.6H2O) = 55.9 + (3 35.5) + (12 1.01) + (6 16) = 271
M(FeCl3.6H2O) = 271 g mol1
Q27.
What is the mass of:
a 0.060 mol of ethane (C2H6)?
b 0.32 mol of glucose (C6H12O6)?
c 6.8 103 mol of urea ((NH2)2CO)?
d 6.12 mol of copper atoms (Cu)?
A27.
It is useful to remember the formula m = nM, where m is the mass in grams, n the
amount of substance in mol, and M the molar mass.
a m(C2H6) = 0.060 (24 + 6) = 1.8 g
b m(C6H12O6) = 0.32 ((6 12) + (12 1) + (6 16)) = 58 g
c m((NH2)2CO) = 6.8 103 ((2 14) + (4 1) + 12 + 16)) = 0.41 g
d m(Cu) = 0.6.12 63.5 = 389 g
18
Q28.
What is the amount (in mol) of each of the following?
a carbon atoms in 1.201 g carbon
b sulfur molecules (S8) in 10.0 g sulfur
c methane molecules (CH4) in 20.0 g methane
d aspirin molecules (C6H4(OCOCH3)COOH) in 300 mg aspirin
e aluminium oxide (Al2O3) in 3.5 tonnes of aluminium oxide (1 tonne = 1000 kg)
A28.
a
b
c
d
e
m
, where m is the mass in grams, n the
M
amount of substance in mol, and M the molar mass in g mol1. Use a periodic
table to work out the molar masses.
1.201
n(C) =
= 0.10 mol
12
10 .0
n(S8) =
= 0.0391 mol
256
20 .0
n(CH4) =
= 1.25 mol
16
0.300
n(C6H4(OCOCH3)COOH) =
= 0.001 67 mol
180
3 500 000
n(Al2O3) =
= 3.4 104 mol
102
Q29.
a
b
c
If 6.0 10 23 atoms of calcium have a mass of 40.1 g, what is the mass of one
calcium atom?
If 1 mol of water molecules has a mass of 18 g, what is the mass of one water
molecule?
What is the mass of one molecule of carbon dioxide?
A29.
a
molar mass
mass of 1 mole
=
NA
number of particlesin a mole
40 .1
= 6.67 1023 g
6.0 10 23
18
= 3.0 1023 g
6.0 10 23
44
= 7.3 1023 g
6.0 10 23
19
Q30.
For each of the following molecular substances, calculate:
a the amount of substance, in moles
b the number of molecules
c the total number of atoms
i 4.2 g of phosphorus (P4)
ii 75.0 g of sulfur (S8)
iii 0.32 g of hydrogen chloride (HCl)
iv 2.2 102 g of glucose (C6H12O6)
A30.
i
a
b
c
ii a
b
c
iii a
b
c
iv a
b
c
Q31.
What mass of iron (Fe) would contain as many iron atoms as there are molecules in
20.0 g of water (H2O)?
A31.
m
It is useful to remember the formula n = M , where m is the mass in grams, n the
amount of substance in mol, and M the molar mass in g mol1. Use a periodic table to
work out the molar masses of iron and water.
M(Fe) = 55.8 g mol1 and 18.0 g mol1
20
n(H2O) =
= 1.11 mol
18
n(Fe) needed = 1.11 mol
m(Fe) needed = 1.11 55.8 = 62.0 g
Q32.
For each of the following ionic substances, calculate:
a the amount of substance, in moles
b the amount of each ion, in moles
i 5.85 g of NaCl
ii 45.0 g of CaCl2
iii 1.68 g of Fe2(SO4)3
A32.
m
It is useful to remember the formula n = M , where m is the mass in grams, n the
amount of substance in mol, and M the molar mass. Use a periodic table to work out
the molar masses.
i
ii
5.85
= 0.100 mol
58 .8
n(NaCl) =
n(CaCl2) =
iii a
b
45 .0
= 0.405 mol
111
n(Fe2(SO4)3) =
1.68
= 0.004 20 mol
399 .6
Q33.
For each of the following numbers of molecules, calculate:
a the amount of substance, in moles
b the mass, in grams, of substance
i 4.50 1023 molecules of water (H2O)
ii 9.00 1024 molecules of methane (CH4)
iii 2.3 1028 molecules of chlorine (Cl2)
iv 1 molecule of sucrose (C12H22O11)
20
21
A33.
m
, where m is the mass in grams, n the
M
amount of substance in mol, and M the molar mass. Remember also that the
number of particles in 1 mol, Avogadros number, NA = 6.02 1023.
number of particles
Use the formula: n =
. Use a periodic table to work out the
NA
molar masses.
4.50 1023
a n(H2O) =
= 0.75 mol
6.02 1023
b m(H2O) = 0.75 18 = 13.5 g
ii
a
b
iii a
b
iv a
b
15.0 mol
240 g
3.8 104 mol
2.7 106 g
1
= 1.7 1024 mol
6.02 10 23
m(C12H22O11) = 1.7 1024 342 = 5.7 1022 g
n(C12H22O11) =
Q34.
a
b
If 0.50 mol of a substance has a mass of 72 g, what is the mass of 1.0 mol of the
substance?
If 6.0 1022 molecules of a substance have a mass of 10 g, what is the molar
mass of the substance?
A34.
m
, where m is the mass in grams, n the
n
amount of substance in mol, and M the molar mass in g mol1. Remember also that the
number of particles in 1 mol is Avogadros number, NA = 6.02 1023.
number of particles
NA
72
= 144 g mol1
0 .5
M(substance) =
6.0 1022
n(substance) =
= 0.1 mol
NA
M(substance) =
10
= 100 g mol1
0 .1
Q35.
Calculate the molar mass of a substance if:
a 2 mol of the substance has a mass of 80 g
b 0.1 mol of the substance has a mass of 9.8 g
c 1.7 mol of the substance has a mass of 74.8 g
d 3.5 mol of the substance has a mass of 371 g
A35.
m
, where m is the mass in grams, n the
n
amount of substance in mol, and M the molar mass in g mol1.
80
a M(substance) =
= 40 g mol1
2
All other parts follow the same process.
b 98 g mol1
c 44 g mol1
d 106 g mol1
Q36.
Which of the following metal samples has the greatest mass?
a 100 g copper
b 4.0 mol of iron atoms
c 1.2 1024 atoms of silver
A36.
It is useful to remember the formula m = nM, where m is the mass in grams, n the
amount of substance in mol, and M the molar mass. Use a periodic table to find the
molar masses of iron and silver. M = 55.8 g mol1 and 108 g mol1, respectively.
Remember also that the number of particles in 1 mol is NA.
m(Fe) = 4.0 55.8 = 223 g
1.2 1024
n(Ag) =
= 2.0 mol
NA
m(Ag) = 2.0 108 = 216 g
the mass of the iron is the greatest
22
23
Q37.
A new antibiotic has been isolated and only 2.0 mg is available. The molar mass is
found to be 12.5 kg mol1.
a Express the molar mass in g mol1.
b Calculate the amount of antibiotic (in mol).
c How many molecules of antibiotic have been isolated?
A37.
It is useful to remember the formula m = nM, where m is the mass in grams, n the
amount of substance in mol, and M the molar mass in g mol1. Remember also that the
number of particles in 1 mol is, Avogadros number, NA = 6.02 1023.
a M(antibiotic) = 12 500 g mol1 = 1.25 104 g mol1
2.0 103
b n(antibiotic) =
1.25 104
= 1.6 107 mol
c number of molecules = nNA
= 1.6 107 6.02 1023
= 9.6 1016 molecules
Q38.
Calculate the percentage by mass of each element in the following compounds:
a Al2O3
b Cu(OH)2
c MgCl2.6H2O
d Fe2(SO4)3
e perchloric acid (HClO4)
A38.
mass of elementin 1 molof compound
100.
mass of 1 molof compound
Use a periodic table to work out the molar masses. A useful check of these answers is
provided by seeing that they add up to 100%, or somewhere close to that value.
a
M(Al) = 27 g mol1, M(O) = 16 g mol1, M(Al2O3) = 102 g mol1.
%(Al) =
2 27
100 = 52.9%
102
%(O) =
3 16
100 = 47.1%
102
24
24.3
100 = 12.0%
203 .3
%(Cl)
2 35 .5
100 = 34.9%
203 .3
%(H)
12 1
100 = 5.9%
203 .3
%(O)
6 16
100 = 47.2%
203 .3
Q39.
Determine the percentage of carbon in the following compounds:
a naphthalene (C10H8)
b acetic acid (CH3COOH)
c urea (NH2CONH2)
d aspirin (C6H4(OCOCH3)COOH)
A39.
mass of elementin 1 molof compound
100.
mass of 1 molof compound
Use a periodic table to work out the molar masses. A useful check of these answers is
provided by seeing that they add up to 100%, or somewhere close to that value.
a M(C10H8) = 128 g mol1, M(H) = 1 g mol1, M(C) = 12 g mol1
10 12
%(C) =
100 = 93.8%
128
b %C = 40%
c %C = 19.9%
d %C = 60.0%
25
Q40.
Determine the empirical formulas of the compounds with the following compositions:
a 42.9% carbon, 57.1% oxygen
b 27.2% carbon, 72.8% oxygen
c 54.5% carbon, 9.1% hydrogen, 36.4% oxygen
d 1.72 g iron, 1.48 g sulfur, 3.02 g oxygen
e 9.6 g carbon, 0.67 g hydrogen, 4.7 g chlorine
f 4.42 g carbon, 0.842 g hydrogen
A40.
The empirical formula provides the simplest whole-number ratio of atoms in a
m
compound. The number of moles of each atom is found by using n =
, where m is
M
the mass in grams and M is the molar mass.
a
C
O
Mass
42.9 g
57.1 g
1
Molar mass
12 g mol
16 g mol1
57 .1
42 .9
m
Amount, using n =
n=
= 3.575 mol
n=
= 3.569 mol
M
12
16
3.569
3.575
Divide all by smallest
=1
=1
amount
3.569
3.569
Round off to whole
1
1
numbers
empirical formula is CO
b
Mass
Molar mass
m
M
Divide all by smallest
amount
Round off to whole
numbers
Amount, using n =
C
27.2 g
12 g mol1
27 .2
n=
= 2.267 mol
12
2.267
=1
2.267
O
72.8 g
16 g mol1
72 .8
n=
= 4.55 mol
16
4.55
=2
2.267
26
c
Mass
Molar mass
Amount, using n =
m
M
C
54.5 g
12 g mol1
54 .5
n =
12
= 4.54 mol
4.54
= 1.99
2.275
O
36.4 g
16 g mol1
36 .4
n =
16
= 2.275 mol
2.275
=1
2.275
H
9.1 g
1 g mol1
9 .1
n =
1
= 9.1 mol
9.1
=4
2.275
Fe
1.72 g
55.8 g mol1
1.72
n =
55 .8
= 0.031 mol
0.031
=1
0.031
S
1.48 g
32 g mol1
1.48
n =
32
= 0.046 mol
0.046
= 1.5
0.031
O
3.02 g
16 g mol1
3.02
n =
16
= 0.189 mol
0.189
=6
0.031
12
m
M
m
M
C
9.6 g
12 g mol1
9 .6
n =
12
= 0.800 mol
0.800
=6
0.132
Cl
4.7 g
35.5 g mol1
4 .7
n =
35 .5
= 0.132 mol
0.132
=1
0.132
H
0.67 g
1 g mol1
0.67
n =
1
= 0.67 mol
0.67
=5
0.132
27
f
Mass
Molar mass
m
M
Divide all by smallest
amount
Round off to whole
numbers
Amount, using n =
C
4.42 g
12 g mol1
4.42
n=
= 0.368 mol
12
0.368
=1
0.368
H
0.842 g
1 g mol1
0.842
n=
= 0.842 mol
1
0.842
= 2.3
0.368
17=7
2.3 7 = 16
C
32 g
12 g mol1
32
n=
12
= 2.67 mol
2.67
= 1.99
1.34
H
6.7 g
1 g mol1
6 .7
n=
1
= 6.7 mol
6.7
=5
1.34
N
18.7 g
14 g mol1
18 .7
n =
14
= 1.34 mol
1.34
=1
1.34
O
42.6 g
16 g mol1
42 .6
n=
16
= 2.66 mol
2.66
=1.99
1.34
28
Q42.
A compound of tungsten and sulfur is a useful solid lubricant. Deduce the empirical
formula of this compound if a particular sample is formed when 1.84 g of tungsten
reacts exactly with 0.64 g of sulfur.
A42.
The empirical formula provides the simplest whole-number ratio of atoms in a
m
compound. The amount of each atom is found by using n =
, where m is the mass
M
in grams and M is the molar mass in g mol1. Use a periodic table to find the molar
masses of W and S.
W
S
Mass
1.84 g
0.64 g
1
Molar mass
184 g mol
32 g mol1
1.84
0.64
m
Amount, using n =
n=
= 0.01 mol
n=
= 0.020 mol
M
32
184
0.20
0.01
Divide all by smallest
=1
=2
amount
0.10
0.01
Round off to whole
1
2
numbers
empirical formula is WS2
Q43.
A clear liquid extracted from fermented lemons was found to consist of carbon,
hydrogen and oxygen. Analysis showed it to be 52.2% carbon and 34.8% oxygen.
a Find the empirical formula of the substance.
b If 2.17 mol of the compound has a mass of 100 g, find the molecular formula of
the compound.
A43.
a
n(C) =
34.8
16
= 2.175 mol
n(O) =
13
1
= 13 mol
Step 3: Convert to whole-number ratios.
4.35
n(C) =
2.175
=2
2.2175
n(O) =
2.175
=1
13
n(H) =
2.175
=6
Step 4: Write as empirical formula.
C2H6O
n(H) =
29
30
Q44.
When 0.200 g of white phosphorus is burnt in oxygen, 0.456 g of an oxide of
phosphorus is formed. Deduce the empirical formula of this oxide.
A44.
The empirical formula provides the simplest whole-number ratio of atoms in a
m
compound. The amount of each atom is found by using n =
, where m is the mass
M
in grams and M is the molar mass in g mol1. Use a periodic table to find the molar
masses of P and O.
Mass
Molar mass
m
M
Divide all by smallest
amount
Round off to whole
numbers
Amount, using n =
O
0.456 0.200 = 0.256 g
16 g mol1
0.256
n=
= 0.016 mol
16
0.016
= 2.5
0.00645
P
0.200 g
31 g mol1
0.200
n=
= 0.006 45 mol
31
0.00643
=1
0.00645
31
Q45.
A hydrocarbon is a compound that contains carbon and hydrogen only. Determine the
empirical formula of a hydrocarbon that is used as a specialty fuel and contains 90.0%
carbon.
A45.
The empirical formula provides the simplest whole-number ratio of atoms in a
m
compound. The amount of each atom is found by using n =
, where m is the mass
M
in grams and M is the molar mass in g mol1. Use a periodic table to find the molar
masses of C and H.
Mass
Molar mass
m
M
Divide all by smallest
amount
Round off to whole
numbers
Amount, using n =
C
90.0 g
12 g mol1
90
n=
= 7.5 mol
12
7.5
=1
7.5
H
100 90.0 = 10.0 g
1 g mol1
10 .0
n=
= 10 mol
1
10
= 1.3
7.5
13=3
1.3 3 = 4
m
M
Ni
3.370 g
? g mol1
3.370
n=
M (Ni)
O
4.286 3.370 = 0.916 g
16 g mol1
0.916
n=
= 0.0573 mol
16
n( Ni)
3.370
1
=
n(O)
M (Ni) 0.0573
3.370
1
1
=
M (Ni) 0.0573 1
3.370
= 58.9 g mol1
0.0573
32
Q47.
4.150 g tungsten was burned in chlorine and 8.950 g tungsten chloride (WCl6) was
formed. Find the relative atomic mass of tungsten.
A47.
The empirical formula provides the simplest whole-number ratio of atoms in a
m
compound. The amount of each atom is found by using n = M , where m is the mass
in grams and M is the molar mass in g mol1. Use a periodic table to find the molar
mass of Cl.
Mass
Molar mass
m
M
Amount, using n =
W
4.150 g
? g mol1
4.150
n=
M (W )
Cl
8.950 4.150 = 4.800 g
35.5 g mol1
4.800
n=
= 0.135 mol
35 .5
n( W )
4.150
=
M (W) 0.135
n(Cl)
4.150
1
=
M (W) 0.135 6
6
= 184.2 g mol1
0.135
Q48.
If 3.72 g of element X reacts with exactly 4.80 g of oxygen to form a compound
whose molecular formula is shown, from other experiments, to be X4O10, what is the
relative atomic mass of X?
A48.
The empirical formula provides the simplest whole-number ratio of atoms in a
m
compound. The amount of each atom is found by using n =
, where m is the mass
M
in grams and M is the molar mass in g mol1. Use a periodic table to find the molar
mass of O.
Mass
Molar mass
Amount, using n =
m
M
X
3.72 g
? g mol1
3.72
n=
M (X)
n(X )
3.72
=
n (O) M (X) 0.3
3.72 10
= 31.0 g mol1
0.3 4
3.72
4
=
M (X) 0.3 10
O
4.80 g
16 g mol1
4.80
n=
= 0.3 mol
16
33
Q49.
Determine the molecular formulas of compounds with the following compositions and
relative molecular masses:
a 82.75% carbon, 17.25% hydrogen; Mr = 58
b 43.66% phosphorus, 56.34% oxygen; Mr = 284
c 40.0% carbon, 6.7% hydrogen, 53.3% oxygen; Mr = 180
d 0.164 g hydrogen, 5.25 g sulfur, 9.18 g oxygen; Mr = 178
A49.
a
Amount, using n =
C
82.75 g
12 g mol1
82.75
n=
= 6.89 mol
12
6.89
=1
6.89
H
17.25 g
1 g mol1
17.25
n=
= 17.25 mol
1
17.25
= 2.5
6.89
12=2
2.5 2 = 5
P4O10
C6H12O6
Mass
Molar mass
Amount, using
m
n=
M
Divide all by
smallest amount
Round off to
whole numbers
34
H
0.164 g
1 g mol1
0.164
n=
1
= 0.164 mol
0.164
=1
0.164
S
5.25 g
32 g mol1
5.25
n=
32
= 0.164 mol
0.164
=1
0.164
O
9.18 g
16 g mol1
9.18
n=
16
= 0.574 mol
0.574
= 3.5
0.164
12=2
12=2
3.5 2 = 7
35
Q51.
Caffeine, which is a stimulant found in coffee, tea and cola drinks, contains 49.48%
carbon, 5.15% hydrogen, 28.87% nitrogen and the rest oxygen.
a Determine the empirical formula of caffeine.
b If 0.20 mol of caffeine has a mass of 38.8 g, what is the molar mass of a caffeine
molecule?
c Determine the molecular formula of caffeine.
d How many moles of caffeine molecules are in 1.00 g caffeine?
e How many molecules of caffeine are in 1.00 g caffeine?
f How many atoms altogether are in 1.00 g caffeine?
A51.
a
C
49.48
12.0 g mol1
49 .98
n =
12 .0
= 4.17 mol
H
5.15
1.01 g mol1
5.15
n =
1.01
= 5.10 mol
4.17
= 4.08
1.02
5.10
= 5.0
1.02
N
28.87
14.0 g mol1
28 .87
n =
14 .0
= 2.06 mol
2.06
= 2.02
1.02
O
16.5
16.0
16 .5
16 .0
= 1.02 mol
n =
1.02
= 1.0
1.02
36
n(caffeine) = m/Mr
= 1.00/194
= 5.15 103 mol
N(caffeine) molecules = n(caffeine) NA
= 5.15 103 6.02 1023
= 3.10 1020 molecules of caffeine
N(caffeine) atoms = n(caffeine) 24 6.02 1023
= 7.44 1025 atoms altogether
Q52.
The empirical formula of a metal oxide can be found by experimentation (see figure
below). The mass of the metal and the mass of the oxygen that reacts with it must be
determined. The six boxes below each contain one step in the experimental method.
A Ignite a burner and heat the metal. B Allow the crucible to cool, then
weigh it.
C Continue the reaction until no
D Clean a piece of metal with the
further change occurs.
emery paper to remove any oxide
layer.
E Place the metal in a clean,
F Weigh the metal and record its
weighed crucible and cover with
mass.
a lid.
a Place the steps in the correct order by letter.
b Wan and Eric collected the following data:
Mass of the metal = 0.542 g
Mass of the empty crucible = 20.310 g
Mass of the crucible and metal oxide = 21.068 g
They found from the data that the metal oxide had a 1 : 1 formula (i.e. MO, where
M = metal). Complete the table, using the data given.
Metal
Mass (g)
Relative atomic mass
Moles
Ratio
c
Oxygen
16.0
Equipment that can be used to find the empirical formula of a metal oxide.
37
A52.
a
b
D, F, E, A, C, B
Step 1: Calculate mass of compound after reaction.
m = 21.068 20.310
= 0.758 g
Step 2: Calculate mass of oxygen.
m = 0.758 0.542
= 0.216 g
Step 3: Calculate amount, in mol, of oxygen.
m
n =
M
0.126
=
16
= 0.0135 mol
Step 4: Use mole ratios to determine amount of metal.
Ratio is 1 : 1, so n = 0.0135 mol
Step 5: Calculate molar mass of metal.
m
M=
n
0.542
=
0.0135
= 40.1
Step 6: Fill in table.
Mass (g)
Relative atomic mass
Moles
Ratio
Metal
0.542
40.1
0.0135 mol
1
Oxygen
0.216
16.0
0.0135 mol
1
38
39
Q4.
Which of the following elements would have atoms with the largest atomic radius?
A Li
B Na
C F
D Cl
A4.
B. Sodium is on the left-hand side of period 3; hence, its outer-shell electron is subject
to the lowest core charge for that period.
Q5.
Which of the following elements would be expected to show greatest similarity in
chemical properties to the element that has 14 electrons in its neutral atoms?
A Al
B P
C Ga
D Ge
A5.
D. Ge is in the same group of the periodic table, with four outer-shell electrons.
Q6.
The Pauli exclusion principle states that:
A all atomic orbitals must hold two electrons
B an atomic orbital must hold a minimum of two electrons
C a new subshell is started whenever an atomic orbital holds two electrons
D an atomic orbital may hold a maximum of two electrons
A6.
D
Q7.
A double negatively charged ion has eight protons. The number of electrons in the ion
is:
A 10
B 8
C 6
D 2
A7.
A. The double negative charge means there are two more electrons than protons,
giving ten electrons in the ion.
40
Q8.
35
A sample of chlorine was thought to consist of the isotopes 17
Cl and 37
17 Cl. If the
relative atomic mass of this sample of chlorine was found to be 35.5, it can be said
that:
35
A there are equal amounts of 17
Cl and 37
17 Cl
35
17 Cl
37
17 Cl
than
37
17
35
17
Cl
C
D
A8.
B. There is a greater abundance of
closer to 35 than to 37.
35
17 Cl
than
37
17 Cl
Q9.
The number of neutrons in
A 18
B 19
C 20
D 39
39 +
19 K
is:
A9.
C. The number of neutrons is the mass number (39) minus the atomic number (19).
Q10.
Which one of the following has a different electronic configuration from the others?
A Na+
B K+
C Ne
D F
A10.
B. All have ten electrons except K+, which has eighteen electrons.
Q11.
In which groups of the periodic table would you not expect to find a metal?
A groups 14 and 15
B groups 14 and 18
C groups 13 and 17
D groups 17 and 18
A11.
D. These groups have a large number of electrons in the outer shell and cannot lose
electrons easily.
41
Q12.
Which one of the following pairs of elements is most likely to combine to form a
compound with properties similar to those of sodium chloride?
A calcium and bromine
B carbon and oxygen
C copper and nickel
D phosphorus and chlorine
A12.
A. Calcium is a metal with a small number of electrons in the outer shell. Bromine is a
non-metal with a large number of electrons in the outer shell. Sodium chloride is also
a compound of a metal and a non-metal, so it will have similar properties to a
compound of calcium and bromine.
Q13.
Isotopes of an element contain:
A the same atomic number and the same mass number
B the same atomic number and a different mass number
C a different atomic number and the same mass number
D a different atomic number and a different mass number
A13.
B. Isotopes have the same number of protons (atomic number) and a different number
of neutrons (mass number is protons plus neutrons).
Q14.
Going down group 7 of the periodic table, the electronegativity:
A decreases because the atomic radius increases
B increases because the atomic number increases
C decreases because the atomic number increases
D increases because the number of subshells increases
A14.
A. The atomic radius increases; hence, the attraction for an additional electron
decreases.
Q15.
The relative atomic mass of magnesium, Ar(Mg), is 24.31. The most important reason
why it is not a whole number is that:
A magnesium atoms lose electrons when they react
B the relative atomic mass given is only an approximation
C not all atoms of magnesium have the same number of neutrons
D the mass of the magnesium atom is compared to the mass of the 12C isotope
A15.
C. Relative atomic mass is an average of the relative isotopic masses for an element.
Isotopes are atoms of magnesium with different numbers of neutrons.
42
Q16.
Which of the following lists contain empirical formulas only?
A C2H2, CBr4, Ca(OH)2, KMnO4
B NH3, N2H4, C6H5CH3, HCOOH
C H2SO4, Al2(SO4)3, C6H5CH3, CH3Cl
D HCOOH, C2H6O, Fe2O3.xH2O, C6H12O6
A16.
C. The following are not empirical formulas: H2SO4, Al2(SO4)3, C6H5CH3, CH3Cl.
Q17.
A compound has an empirical formula of CH. A 0.25 mol sample of the compound
weighs 13 g. The molecular formula is:
A C8H8
B C6H6
C C4H4
D C2H2
A17.
C.
Molar mass of hydrocarbon is
13 g
= 52 g mol1
0.25 mol
52
=4
13
Short-answer questions
Q18.
a
b
c
d
In what part of the periodic table are the metals found? Why are they found there?
The helium atom contains two electrons in the outer shell. Why is helium not
placed in group 2 with the other elements also containing two electrons in the
outer shell?
The heavier elements, atomic numbers 87112, are all metals. Explain this fact.
Some metallic elements are very reactive. Which group of the periodic table
contains the most reactive metals?
A18.
a
b
c
d
Metals are found at the left and bottom of the periodic table. These elements have
a small number of electrons in their outer shell.
Helium has a full outer shell and cannot easily donate these electrons as metals
do.
Elements 87112 all have just one or two outer-shell electrons, which can be
easily lost.
group 1
43
Q19.
a Explain, using suitable examples, the relationship between the electronic
configuration of an element and its position in the periodic table.
b Consider the following: Na, Cl, Mn, Ca2+, O2, Al3+. For each:
i give its electronic configuration
ii indicate its position in the periodic table (e.g. group 17, period 2, or transition
series, period 4)
A19.
a For any element, the shell of the highest order of an element containing electrons
determines the period of an element. For example, in calcium the fourth shell
contains electrons and, being the highest order in which electrons are found,
makes calcium a period 4 element.
The number of electrons in the outermost shell of an element determines the
group number of the element. For example, calcium has two electrons in its
outermost shell and so belongs to group 2.
Transition metals are those that have a d subshell being filled.
Lanthanides and actinides have f subshells being filled.
b Na
1s22s22p63s1
group 1 period 3
2 2 6 2 5
Cl
1s 2s 2p 3s 3p
group 17 period 3
Mn
1s22s22p63s23p63d54s2 transition series period 4
Ca2+
1s22s22p63s23p6
group 2 period 4
2
O
1s22s22p6
group 16 period 2
3+
2 2 6
Al
1s 2s 2p
group 13 period 3
Q20.
Select your answers to the questions below from the following list of elements:
Cl, C, Na, Mg, K, O, F, Al, N, Ca.
Which elements:
a are in period 2 of the periodic table?
b are in period 3 of the periodic table?
c are in group 1 of the periodic table?
d are in group 2 of the periodic table?
e are in group 13 of the periodic table?
f are in group 16 of the periodic table?
g are classified as metals?
h have one valence electron?
i have three valence electrons?
j has the highest molar mass?
A20.
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
C, N, O and F
Na, Mg, Al and Cl
Na and K
Mg and Ca
Al
O
Na, Mg, Al, K and Ca
Na and K
Al
Ca
44
Q21.
a
(ii)
Symbol
9
4 Be
(iii)
17
8
31
15
(iv)
(v)
(vi)
34
(vii)
78
P
(viii)
The neutron was not discovered until more than 30 years after the discovery of
the proton and the electron. Why was the neutron more difficult to detect?
A21.
a
i 5
ii 9
iii 17
iv 15
v 16
vi 31
vii 44
78
viii 34
Se
Most of the instruments used for investigating the structure of the atom are based
on the use or measurement of electric charge. As the neutron is an uncharged
particle, it was not detected by these instruments.
Q22.
a
b
c
45
A22.
a
1s22s22p63s23p3
ii
As the empirical formula is P2O5, the molecule must contain a whole number
of P2O5 units.
The molar mass of one of these units is
((2 30.974) + (5 16)) = 141.948 g mol1.
The number of units in a molecule = molar mass of the compound/molar
mass of one unit
284g mol1
=
141.948g mol1
=2
molecular formula of the compound is P4O10
Properties are more similar to those of water. Water is a compound of two nonmetals (hydrogen and oxygen), as is the oxide of phosphorus, since both
phosphorus and oxygen are non-metals.
46
Q23.
The original version of the periodic table was devised by the Russian chemist Dmitri
Mendeleev in 1869.
a What were the two pieces of information that he used to devise the table?
In the modern form of the periodic table, the elements are arranged in order of atomic
number.
b What information about the structure of the atom is given by its atomic number?
c What is the link between the atomic number of an element and the block in the
periodic table in which it would be found?
d Consider the element with atomic number 14.
i Write the full electronic configuration.
ii In which group, period and block of the periodic table would it be found?
A23.
a
b
c
Q24.
The electronic configurations of seven elements (AG) are given below.
A 1s22s22p5
B 1s22s22p63s1
C 1s22s22p63s13p5
D 1s22s22p63s23p64s2
E 1s22s22p63s23p63d64s1
F 1s22s22p63s23p63d84s2
G 1s22s22p63s23p63d104s24p5
Indicate which one or more are likely to be:
a metals
b d-block elements
c group 17 elements
d period 3 elements
e elements not in the ground state
A24.
a
b
c
d
e
B, D, E, F
E, F
A, G
B, C
C, E
47
Q25.
a
b
c
d
e
A25.
a
b
c
d
1s22s22p63s23p64s2
i Electrons are promoted to a higher energy level. An example of an electronic
configuration of an excited calcium atom could be (several answers
possible): 1s22s22p63s23p64p2.
ii With sufficient energy, a calcium atom can lose its valence electrons to form
a cation e.g. Ca2+ with electronic configuration 1s22s22p63s23p6.
The ion is much smaller as electrons occupy most of the atoms volume and the
ion has one less electron shell than the atom.
The mass of electrons is negligible in comparison to that of the protons and
neutrons in an atom. The number of protons and neutrons is the same in the atom
and ion.
e.g. Mg, Sr
Q26.
Give explanations for the following:
a A sodium atom has a larger atomic radius than a chlorine atom, even though both
belong to period 3.
b A sodium ion (Na+) is much smaller than the sodium atom.
c Fluorine is more electronegative than iodine.
A26.
a
Members of period 3 all have their outer-shell electrons in the third shell but the
core charge increases across the period from +1 for sodium to +7 for chlorine.
Hence, the outer-shell electrons in the chlorine are attracted more strongly to the
nucleus, reducing the radius of the species.
From the electronic configuration for sodium, 1s22s22p63s1, it can be seen that the
Na atom has three shells of electrons but the Na+ ion has lost the single outershell electron and the remaining eight electrons of the second shell are then
attracted to a greater core charge.
The fluorine atom is smaller than that of iodine. Electrons are attracted to fluorine
atoms more strongly than to those of iodine because they are closer to the
positively charged nucleus in fluorine. So, fluorine is more electronegative.
Q27.
32
40
20
14
15
19
8
4
The following is a list of atoms: 27
13 A, 20 B, 16 C, 7 D, 3 E, 7 F, 9 G, 9 H, 2 I.
a Which pairs of atoms are isotopes?
b Which atoms have equal numbers of protons and neutrons in the nucleus?
c Which is an isotope of sulfur?
d Which has one more electron than a magnesium atom?
e Which is a group 2 element?
f How many different elements are shown?
A27.
a
b
c
d
e
f
D and F, G and H
B, C, D and I
C
A
B
7
Q28.
A sample of magnesium carbonate weighs 21.8 g.
a Calculate the amount (mol) of magnesium carbonate present.
b Calculate the amount (mol) of oxygen atoms present.
c Calculate the number of carbon atoms present.
d Calculate the total number of atoms present.
e Calculate the percentage, by mass, of magnesium in magnesium carbonate.
A28.
a
48
49
24 .3
100 %
84 .3
= 28.8%
Q29.
Ethylene glycol is a compound often used as an antifreeze in cars in cold weather. Its
molar mass is 62 g mol1. It has a percentage composition of 38.7% carbon, 9.7%
hydrogen and the rest oxygen. Determine:
a the empirical formula of ethylene glycol
b the molecular formula of ethylene glycol
50
A29.
The molecular formula is always a whole-number multiple of the empirical formula.
The empirical formula provides the simplest whole-number ratio of atoms in a
m
compound. The amount of each atom is found by using n =
, where m is the mass
M
in grams and M is the molar mass in g mol1. Use a periodic table to find the molar
masses of C, H and O.
a
C
O
H
Mass
38.7 g
100 (38.7 + 9.7) = 51.6 g 9.7 g
Molar mass
12 g mol1
16 g mol1
1 g mol1
Amount, using
38 .7
9 .7
51 .6
n =
n =
m
n =
= 3.225 mol
12
1
n=
16
M
= 3.225 mol
= 9.7 mol
3.225
3.225
9.7
Divide all by
=1
=1
=3
smallest amount 3.225
3.225
3.225
Round off to
1
1
3
whole numbers
b
Q30.
Methane (CH4) is the major component of natural gas.
a What is the mass of 0.50 mol methane?
b How many molecules are there in 0.100 g methane?
c How many atoms are there altogether in 0.10 g methane?
d How many protons are there in 0.10 g methane?
e What is the percentage by mass of carbon in methane?
f What mass of carbon would be present in 34 g methane?
A30.
It is useful to remember the formula m = nM, where m is the mass in grams, n the
amount of substance in mol, and M the molar mass in g mol1. Use a periodic table to
find the molar masses. M(C) = 12 g mol1 and M(CH4) = 16 g mol1. Remember also
that the number of particles in 1 mol is Avogadros number, NA = 6.02 1023.
a m(CH4) = 0.50 16 = 8.0 g
0.100
b n(CH4) =
16
= 0.006 25 mol
number of molecules = nNA
= 0.006 25 6.02 1023
= 3.76 1021 molecules
51
Q31.
Cobalt (Co) has an atomic number of 27.
a Give the ground state electronic configuration of cobalt.
b To what section of the periodic table does cobalt belong?
Cobalt reacts with oxygen to form a compound, cobalt oxide, formula CoO. Cobalt
oxide contains 78.6% by mass of cobalt.
c Use the above information to calculate the relative atomic mass of cobalt.
A31.
a
b
c
1s22s22p63s23p63d74s2
first transition metal series or d-block
The empirical formula provides the simplest whole-number ratio of atoms in a
m
compound. The amount of each atom is found by using n =
, where m is the
M
mass in grams and M is the molar mass in g mol1. Use a periodic table to find the
molar mass of O.
O
21.4 g
16 g mol1
m
21 .4
Amount, using n =
n=
= 1.34 mol
M
16
78.6
As the empirical formula is CoO, the ratio is 1 : 1 =
: 1.34
M (Co)
78 .6
M(Co) = 1.34 = 58.7 g mol1
Mass
Molar mass
Co
78.6 g
? g mol1
78.6
n=
M (Co)
52
Q32.
a
Calculate the relative atomic mass of silicon from the data given below.
Relative isotopic mass
27.98
28.98
29.98
To what:
i group
ii period
of the periodic table does silicon belong?
A32.
a
2808.869
100
= 28.1
b
i
ii
14
3
53
Q33.
The successive ionisation energies for an element have been plotted in the diagram.
a
b
c
A33.
a
b
c
3
1s22s22p63s1
1+
Q34.
The graphs show trends in some of the properties of elements as you go from top to
bottom down group 17 of the periodic table.
Which graph best represents the trend for:
a electronegativities?
b first ionisation energies?
c number of outer-shell electrons?
Figure 3.13
d atomic radii?
A34.
a
b
c
d