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For c, how many moles of O is there in 0.386 grams?
Yep, good. And how many moles of K and Cl is there in KClO3 for every one mole of oxygen? That was worded a bit awkwardly
I don't know what you were doing above but the main principle here is that 3 moles of O reacts with 1 mole of K and 1 mole of Cl to produce 1 mole of KClO3 right? Are we clear with this point?Sooo....following on from this principle, 0.024125 moles of oxygen will react with 0.024125/3 moles of K and 0.024125/3 moles of Cl to produce 0.024125/3 moles of KClO3. Are we fine with this?From here you just multiply the number of moles by the molar mass of KClO3 to get the mass.Hope this helps.
No, for the molar mass, you gotta look on your periodic table. The atomic weight is what you are looking for.Add up these values (ie, 1 K + 1 Cl + 3 O) and this your molar mass, then multiply this by the moles
Multiply 122.55 by the number of moles of KClO3Remember earlier we got 0.024125 moles of oxygen will react with 0.024125/3 moles of K and 0.024125/3 moles of Cl to produce 0.024125/3 moles of KClO3, you've just worked this number out, .00804167 so multiply the two together