I'm confused on how to solve this problem though without just "knowing" what hydroxyapatite is.
Big-Daddy nailed it (I mean the method, he was not the first to post the answer).
You are told it is a basic (OH
-) calcium (Ca
2+) phosphate (PO
43-). Basic means no chances of HPO
4- and H
2PO
4-. Molecule is Ca
k(PO
4)
l(OH)
m. Then it is just a matter of writing correct charge balance (molecule must be neutral) and molar mass equations:
2k - 3l - m = 0
40k + 95l + 17m = 502
solving them in terms of a parameter and poking the solution space with small integers (which is just a fancy way of calling trial and error
).
For example you can solve these equations for k:
[tex]k = \frac{502-44l}{74}[/tex]
and plug l=1, 2, 3... into the equation. When l is 3, you get a nice integer value of 5 for k, so you just plug l=3 and k=5 into original set of equations and you get m=1 - so Ca
5(PO
4)
3OH is the correct answer.
In general this kind of a problem doesn't have to have a unique solution.