OK, I've done this problem a million times and I keep getting it wrong. My professor won't show me how to work out the problem, and instead keeps hinting at what the answer is. Chemistry isn't my best subject AT ALL, so hinting at what the answer is doesn't help me at all.
So, how many atoms of P are in 5 moles of P4O10?
I thought it was:
(6.023 * 1023 atoms) * (5 mol) = (3.0115 * 1024)
---------------
(1 mol)
(3.0115 * 1024 atoms) * 28.57% = 8.6043 *1023 atoms
Which is apparently wrong.
Then, Yahoo! Answers said something like this:
5 moles of P4O10 * 4 P atoms= 20 moles of P
(20 moles) * (6.023 * 10^23atoms/mole) = 1.2046 *10^25 atoms.
Which doesn't make any sense to me at all. And then my teacher said something like I had the general IDEA of how to answer the problem (which I totally don't) but that he insisted I write out the problem so the units work out. Which, I don't really know how to do. I understand how to work out units and cancel stuff out, but I just don't understand the whole concept of this problem or the way to work this particular problem out at all. So, could someone please show me a very detailed step-by-step process on how to figure out this problem? I have quite a few problems on my homework that are very similar to this one and I have no idea how to solve them. You can even solve a made up problem if you don't want to give me the answer to my homework, I just a blueprint to work with here.
Thank you so much!