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How many moles of hydrogen atoms are there in one mole of (NH4)PMo12O40?

Answers
4
3
1
12
7


Sagot :

Answer:

I don't think (NH4)PMo12O40 is written properly, but if it is, there are 4 moles of hydrogen atoms for every 1 mole of (NH4)PMo12O40

Explanation:

1 mole of (NH4)PMo12O40 has 6.02x10^23 molecules of (NH4)PMo12O40.  Each molecule of (NH4)PMo12O40 has 4 hydrogen atoms.  If the molecule is decomposed to just it's elements, there would be 4 moles of hydrogen atoms for every one mole of (NH4)PMo12O40.

The number of moles of hydrogen atoms in one mole of (NH₄)PMo₁₂O₄₀ is 4. Hence, option A is correct.

What are moles?

Moles can be given as the mass of the compound to the molar mass.

Moles = Mass/Molar mass

The subscript to the H in the formula describes the number of hydrogen atom in a molecule.

Thus, 1 molecule of (NH₄)PMo₁₂O₄₀ contains 4 atoms of hydrogen.

1 mole = 6.023*10²³ molecules

1 molecule  (NH₄)PMo₁₂O₄₀ = 4 hydrogen atoms

1 mole  (NH₄)PMo₁₂O₄₀ = 6.023*10²³ * 4 hydrogen atoms

1 mole  (NH₄)PMo₁₂O₄₀ = 4 moles of hydrogen atoms

Thus, the moles of hydrogen atoms present in 1 mole of (NH₄)PMo₁₂O₄₀ is 4. Hence option A is correct.

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