asked 77.7k views
1 vote
A chemist prepares a solution of sodium carbonate by measuring out of sodium carbonate into a volumetric flask and filling the flask to the mark with water. Calculate the concentration in of the chemist's sodium carbonate solution. Be sure your answer has the correct number of significant digits.

asked
User Enchew
by
8.4k points

1 Answer

5 votes

Answer:

The correct answer will be "
9.45* 10^(-5) \ mol/L".

Step-by-step explanation:

We have:

Moles of solute (Na₂Co₃) =
18.9 \mu \ mol

=
18.9* 10^(-6)


1 \mu \ mol =
10^(-6) \ mol

Now,

The volume of the solution will be:


0.200 \ L


{1 \ mL=0.001 \ L}

The formula to find the concentration will be:


Concentration = (moles \ of \ solute \ (mol))/(Volume \ of \ solution \ (L))

On substituting the given values, we get


=(18.9* 10^(-6))/(0.200)


=9.45* 10^(-5) \ mol/L

answered
User Mild Fuzz
by
8.4k points
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