I rounded this to 492g. Textbook answer was 490g (4.9x102). This “small” discrepancy keeps popping up on different problems. I think my problem lies in sig figs. Am I correct in my assumption about the problem being in the use (or lack thereof) of sig figs?
I think that is part of the problem. The purpose of significant figures is that your calculated accuracy can't be claimed higher than your measured accuracy.
Given:
Here is what I did:
0.50qt x 946ml/1qt = 473ml x 1.04g/1ml = 491.92g
And you have two significant figures for the measured value of quarts. So you answer should have two significant figures, or 490 g
I rounded this to 492g. Textbook answer was 490g (4.9x102). This “small” discrepancy keeps popping up on different problems. I think my problem lies in sig figs. Am I correct in my assumption about the problem being in the use (or lack thereof) of sig figs?
Part of the problem, yes.
Now given:
The textbook solved it like this 0.50qt x 1L/1.06qt x 1000ml/1L x 1.04g/1ml = 490g
so, combining the middle terms, to make the calculation more like yours: 1000ml/1.06 qt =943.40 ml
0.50 qt x 943ml * 1.04 g = 490.36g
Which again, we would round to 2 significant figures, for 490 g
The book's conversion factor of qt to liter is slightly different than yours...
That’s not a good, seeing how all conversion factors came from the same textbook. The book is : “Chemistry An introduction to General,Organic, and Biological Chemistry” tenth edition, written by Karen C. Timberlake.
I don't think that's a real problem. The 946 mL you use for ml in a US quart is not much different than the 943 g/US quart the second one uses.