So it would be (1.40*10-4)/2
No. Look at the reaction equation - every mole of methane needs TWO moles of oxygen. If so, 1.40*10
-4 moles of methane need how many?
then what? Do I multiply by Avagadros to get volume?
No. Avogadro's number tells you how many molecules are in the mole, not what volume they occupy.
Do you know how to deal with units? Avogadro's number has units of
[tex]\frac{number~of~molecules}{mole}[/tex]
Number of moles has - not surprisingly - units of just [itex]mole[/itex]. When you multiply the two, you get
[tex]mole\times\frac{number~of~molecules}{mole}[/tex]
Mole cancels out and the result is [itex]number~of~molecules[/itex].
Do you know what is a volume occupied by 1 mole of a gas at STP? Or do you know the ideal gas equation? If not, google these things.