Question is as follows:
A solution contains 10% HCl by mass in water. What is the molarity of the solution? The molar mass of HCl is 36.45 g/mol and the density of HCl is 1.05 kg/L
The answer is 2.88 M (10/100)(1/36.45)(1.05)(1000)
I do not understand why we need to use the density of HCl when solving this question. Can't we just do the following:
(10 g of HCl / 100 g water)(1 mole HCl / 36.45 g HCl)(1 g H2O/1 mL H2O)(1000 mL H2O/1 L H2O). Wouldn't this give us the molarity for HCl?
Edit: Even if we exchanged 100 g water for 100 g solution, I don't know how we could cancel it out with density. Isn't density for HCl they provided literally kg HCl / L HCl?