Question #658b0

1 Answer
Aug 26, 2017

"14 mol L"^(-1)

Explanation:

Assuming that you can dissolve 3.4 moles of this unknown solute in enough water to make "245 mL" of solution at room temperature, you can calculate the molarity of this solution by figuring out how many moles of solute would be present in

"1 L" = 10^3color(white)(.)"mL"

of this solution.

Now, solutions are homogeneous mixtures, which implies that they same composition throughout.

This will let you use the known composition of the solution

"3.4 moles solute " -> " 245 mL solution"

as a conversion factor to help you find the number of moles of solute that would be present in 10^3 "mL" of this solution.

You're going from volume of solution to moles, so set up the conversion factor as

"3.4 moles solute"/"245 mL solution" color(white)(aa)color(white)((color(blue)( larr " what you need goes on top")aaaaaa)/color(blue)(larr " what you have goes on the bottom"))

You should end up with

10^3 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("mL solution"))) * "3.4 moles solute"/(245 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("mL solution")))) = "13.88 moles solute"

Since this represents the number of moles of solute present in 10^3color(white)(.)"mL" = "1 L" of solution, you can say that the molarity of the solution is

color(darkgreen)(ul(color(black)("molarity" = "14 mol L"^(-1))))

The answer is rounded to two sig figs, the number of sig figs you have for the number of moles of solute present in your sample.