Question #45686

1 Answer
Apr 15, 2016

Here's my take on this.

Explanation:

I'm not really sure I understand what you're asking here, but I'll try to make an educated guess.

A solution's molarity tells you many moles of solute you get per liter of solution. You cannot use molarity to find liters of solute, so I assume that you're interested in finding the number of moles of sodium hydroxide, "NaOH", present in your solution.

So, I think that the question goes like this

How many moles of solute, "NaOH", you get if the molarity is equal to "1.0 M" and the volume of the solution is "0.05 L"?

The interesting thing about molarity is that you can use it as a conversion factor to go from volume to moles of solute and vice versa.

Your solution is said to have a molarity of

"1.0 M" = "1.0 mol L"^(-1)

This tells you that one liter of this solution contains 1.0 mole of sodium hydroxide, your solute. You can thus use this value to figure out how many moles of solute you'd get in "0.05 L" of solution

0.05 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("L solution"))) * overbrace("1.0 mole NaOH"/(1 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("L solution")))))^(color(purple)("= 1.0 mol L"^(-1))) = color(green)(|bar(ul(color(white)(a/a)"0.05 moles NaOH"color(white)(a/a)|)))

So, a "0.05-L" sample of your "1.0 mol L"^(-1) sodium hydroxide solution will contain 0.05 moles of sodium hydroxide.