We are given that: - 1 mL of water contains 25 drops - The density of water = 1 g/mL - The molecular weight of water (H₂O) = 18 g/mol - $N_A$ is Avogadro's number
Step 1: Calculate the mass of 1 drop of water. The mass of 1 mL of water = 1 g, and there are 25 drops in 1 mL, so the mass of 1 drop of water is:
Mass of 1 drop = $\dfrac{1}{25}$ g
Step 2: Calculate the number of moles in 1 drop of water. The number of moles of water in 1 drop is:
$\text{Moles of water} = \dfrac{\text{Mass of 1 drop}}{\text{Molar mass of water}} = \dfrac{1/25}{18}$ mol
Step 3: Calculate the number of molecules in 1 drop of water. The number of molecules in 1 drop is:
$\text{Number of molecules} = \text{Moles of water} \times N_A = \dfrac{1}{25} \times \dfrac{1}{18} \times N_A$ This simplifies to:
$\text{Number of molecules} = \dfrac{1}{25 \times 18} \times N_A = \dfrac{1}{450} \times N_A$ Finally, we get:
Answer: $\dfrac{0.02}{9} \times N_A$
Calculate the number of moles present in 9.10 × 1016 kg of water.
0.1 mole of compound S will weigh ...... g, (given the molar mass in g mol\(^{-1}\) C = 12, H = 1, O = 16)
A beam of light of wavelength \(\lambda\) falls on a metal having work function \(\phi\) placed in a magnetic field \(B\). The most energetic electrons, perpendicular to the field, are bent in circular arcs of radius \(R\). If the experiment is performed for different values of \(\lambda\), then the \(B^2 \, \text{vs} \, \frac{1}{\lambda}\) graph will look like (keeping all other quantities constant).