We just did a lab called Standard Heat of Formation, where we used a calorimeter to find the temperature when HCl reacted with Mg. I used 80.1 mL of 3.0 molar HCl, and 0.6000g of Mg.
First thing, I'm asked to calculate the mass of 3.0 molar HCl used.
My thought was that since molarity = mols/volume, that I would plug in the molarity and volume to calculate the number of mols, and then convert to grams. (I got 8.76 g)
Then I was looking through my lab manual, and found a note that say's specifically, "Use the density of a dilute aqueous solution (1.01 g/ml) when calculating the mass of the solution for which you know only the volume." So if that's the case, 1.01 = g/ 80.1 mL, and that means grams would equal 80.9 g.
What is the right way to approach this? Everything was making perfect sense until I read that note. Now I'm afraid all of my calculations are off. :/ Can anyone guide me in the right direction? Why would one of these methods be right, while the other isn't?