I'm having trouble getting my head around this problem...
The question is:
"How many moles of;
a. MgCl2
b. Mg2+ ions
c. Cl- ions
is there in 16.4mL of 0.117mol L-1 of MgCl2"
Now the first one is easy if I just use C=n/V and works out to be 1.92x10-3 mol. This is where I come unstuck. Why is the answer to (b) the same as (a)? And how do you come up with an answer of 3.84 x 10-3 mol of Cl- ions.
My logic was that if 1mol of MgCl2 has a molecular weight of 95.3g/mol, then it will be 25.5% Mg and 74.5% Cl, and therefore 1.92x10-3mol of MgCl2 will be 25.5% Mg2+ ions and 74.5% Cl- ions so I could work it out from these percentages based on the chemical formula. Obviously this is wrong but I can't find an explanation of why it is wrong.
If anyone could explain this I'd very much appreciate it.
regards,
Simon