asked 43.3k views
5 votes
Suppose the mass spectrum of a hypothetical monatomic element X contains a signal at mass number 13 and another of identical height at mass number 15.

A. Sketch the mass spectrum. Make sure each axis is properly labeled.
B. How many isotopes are present? Why?
C. What are the fractional abundances of the isotopes? Why?

2 Answers

4 votes

Answer:

b) it has one two isotopes that is x∧13 , x∧15 are ratio 1:1

c) the fractional abundances of the isotopes is 100%

Step-by-step explanation:

check the attachment for answer.

Suppose the mass spectrum of a hypothetical monatomic element X contains a signal-example-1
answered
User Piotr Zolnierek
by
8.3k points
6 votes
1. Ur graph should have 2 vertical lines || , of equal height at mass 13 and 15.

2. One, because you have the mass, which in this case is 13 and the other 15, which has the same height. So it must be the isotope. By definition, an isotope has the same number of protons, but different number of neutrons.

3. to solve for fractional abundance, Let x = fraction of element: "I"-13 then fraction of "I"-15 must be 1-x so you have: 13x + (15)(1-x) = 13 solve for x.
answered
User Erric J Manderin
by
8.7k points
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