Question #1762a

1 Answer
Mar 13, 2017

"0.80 dm"^3

Explanation:

The first thing you need to do here is to figure out how many moles of sodium hydroxide are present in "3.2 g" of this compound.

To do that, use the compound's molar mass

3.2 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("g"))) * "1 mole NaOH"/(40.0color(red)(cancel(color(black)("g")))) = "0.080 moles NaOH"

Now, you know that molarity is defined as the number of moles of solute present in "1 dm"^3 of solution.

In your case, a "0.10 mol dm"^(-3) sodium hydroxide solution contains 0.10 moles of sodium hydroxide, the solute, for every "1 dm"^3 of solution.

Notice that you need to have 0.080 moles of sodium hydroxide, so you can say that you're definitely going to need less than "1 dm"^3 of solution.

More specifically, you will need

0.0080 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("moles NaOH"))) * ("1 dm"^3color(white)(.)"solution")/(0.10color(red)(cancel(color(black)("moles NaOH")))) = color(darkgreen)(ul(color(black)("0.80 dm"^3color(white)(.)"solution")))

The answer is rounded to two sig figs.