Re: HSC Chemistry Marathon 2016
From the Wikipedia link, the molar mass of chromium (III) oxide is 151.9904 g/mol. (You could also have found this from a Periodic Table if you knew that chromium (III) oxide is Cr2O3.)
I'm lazy, so let M = 151.9904 g/mol (the molar mass) and let m = 140.0 g (the mass of the sample).
Hence the moles of chromium (III) oxide in the sample n = m/M.
Hence the number of chromium atoms in the sample is 2n = 2m/M, as there are 2 Cr's per Cr2O3. The rest is a calculator exercise.
(Relevant page on Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chromium(III)_oxide.)Determine the number of moles of chromium atoms in 140.0g chromium(III) oxide.
I thought I knew how to do this but I can't get the answer given in the solutions.
From the Wikipedia link, the molar mass of chromium (III) oxide is 151.9904 g/mol. (You could also have found this from a Periodic Table if you knew that chromium (III) oxide is Cr2O3.)
I'm lazy, so let M = 151.9904 g/mol (the molar mass) and let m = 140.0 g (the mass of the sample).
Hence the moles of chromium (III) oxide in the sample n = m/M.
Hence the number of chromium atoms in the sample is 2n = 2m/M, as there are 2 Cr's per Cr2O3. The rest is a calculator exercise.