Question #99479

1 Answer
Oct 30, 2017

Carbon (C)

Explanation:

A "chloride" by definition is some compound with chlorine in it. So therefore, your mystery element and chlorine form a compound XCl with molar mass 47.5 "g".

We also know that the molar mass of any compound is the sum of the molecular weights of its constituent elements. Therefore, we have:

M_x + M_(Cl) = M_(XCl)

The molar mass of Cl is 35.45 "g". Plugging that, along with the compound's molar mass, gives:

M_x + 35.45 = 47.5.

Solving for M_x is now simple:

M_x = 47.5 - 35.45 = 12.05 "g"

If you look on a periodic table, you'll see that that molar mass is closest to that of carbon. So carbon is your mystery element.

However, "C"Cl is not a compound that exists. "C"Cl_4 does, but not "C"Cl. So either this question has assumed a made-up compound, or the problem statement has an incorrect molar mass. Regardless, this is the process you would follow.

What if you had to take into account the possibility of multiple Cl atoms, or even multiple atoms of they mystery element, in the compound? Well, then you'd need to at least be given a generic formula (ex. X_2Cl_4) in order to solve.

Hope that helps :)