How many oxygen atoms are present in a 120*g mass of "nitric acid"?

2 Answers
Feb 24, 2017

Approx. 3.5xx10^24 "oxygen atoms......"

Explanation:

"Moles of nitric acid"-=(120*g)/(63.01*g*mol^-1)=1.90*mol.

And thus, given a formula of HNO_3, there are 3xx1.90*mol "oxygen atoms" in the given mass of nitric acid.

And since 1*mol specifies a quantity of 6.022xx10^23*mol^-1, there are:

3xx1.90*molxx6.022xx10^23*mol^-1 "oxygen atoms"

=?? "oxygen atoms............"

Feb 24, 2017

Depends on the concentration.....

Explanation:

If you are thinking of concentrated nitric acid, then it is typically 68% HNO_3, 32% water. Fuming nitric acid will have HNO_3 content of 86%, and only 14% water.

Oxygen atoms are present in both components, so you'd need to work out the number of moles of both.......

If you take standard conc. nitric acid, then 120 g contains 81.6 g of HNO_3 and 38.4 g of water. This gives you (81.6 / 63.01) = 1.295 moles of HNO_3 and (38.4 / 18.02) = 2.131 moles of water.

Each mole of HNO_3 contains 6.02 x 10^23 molecules each containing an oxygen atom. The same applies to water.

So you have (6.02 x 10^23 x 1.295) + (6.02 x 10^23 x 2.131) = 2.062 x 10^24 oxygen atoms in total.