Question #73cbd

1 Answer
Oct 31, 2015

The answer is (a) 2.4 * 10^(25)2.41025

Explanation:

Well, you need to first figure out how many covalent bonds you have in one molecule of carbon tetrachloride, "CCl"_4CCl4.

To do that, take a look at the molecule's Lewis structure

![http://www.mikeblaber.org/oldwine/chm1045/notes/Geometry/Molec/Geom01.htm](useruploads.socratic.org)

Notice that the central carbo natom forms 44 single bonds with four individual chlorine atoms. This tells you that you get 44 covalent bonds per molecule of carbon tetrachloride.

So, how many would you get per mole?

You know that one mole of any substance contains exactly 6.022 * 10^(23)6.0221023 molecules of that substance - this is known as Avogadro's number.

This means that one mole of carbon chloride molecules will contain a total of

6.022 * 10^(23)color(red)(cancel(color(black)("molecules"))) * "4 cov. bonds"/(1color(red)(cancel(color(black)("molecule")))) = 2.41 * 10^(24)"covalent bonds"

Finally, ten moles of carbon chloride will of course contain 10 times more covalent bonds thatn one mole, so the final answer will be

10color(red)(cancel(color(black)("moles"))) * (2.41 * 10^(24)"cov. bonds")/(1color(red)(cancel(color(black)("mole")))) = color(green)(2.4 * 10^(25)"cov. bonds")