Calculate the mass of aluminum in 500 g of Al(C2H3O2)3 ?

Hey guys! Working on a really hard chemistry assignment. If you could explain how to solve a problem like this to me, it would be awesome :)

1 Answer
Apr 29, 2018

#"70 g"#.

Explanation:

First, we need to find the number of moles of #Al(C_2H_3O_2)_3# in #"500 g"#. To do that, we need to find the molar mass (mass of #1# mole) of #Al(C_2H_3O_2)_3# by adding up the individual molar masses of its constituent elements:

#Al(C_2H_3O_2)_3 = Al + (3xx2xxC) + (3xx3xxH) + (3xx2xxO)#

These individual molar masses can be found on the periodic table. For example, here's the molar mass of #Al#:

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After we've found all of the individual molar masses on the periodic table, we can plug them into our first equation:

#Al + (3xx2xxC) + (3xx3xxH) + (3xx2xxO)#
#= 26.98 + (3xx2xx12.01) + (3xx3xx1.008) + (3xx2xx16.00)#
#"= 204.11 g/mol"#

Now, we can divide #"500 g"# by #"204.11 g/mol"# to find how many moles of #Al(C_2H_3O_2)_3# are in #"500 g"#:

#"moles" = "mass"/"molar mass" = "500 g"/"204.11 g/mol"#
#"= 2.45 mol"#

In #1# mole of #Al(C_2H_3O_2)_3#, there #1# mole of aluminum.
So, in #2.45# moles of #Al(C_2H_3O_2)_3#, there would be #2.45# moles of aluminum.

So, to find the mass of #2.45# moles of aluminum, we'd just need to multiply the molar mass (mass of #1# mole) of aluminum by #2.45# moles:

#"mass" = "molar mass" xx "moles" = "26.98 g/mol" xx "2.45 mol"#
#"= 66.1 g"#

Finally, since there is only #1# significant figure in the amount provided to us in the question (#"500 g"#), there should only be #1# significant figure in our answer.
So, we'd have to round #"66.1 g"# to #"70 g"#. :)