How many grams of CuSO_4CuSO4 are present in 652 mL of .250 M CuSO_4CuSO4 solution?

2 Answers
Jan 17, 2018

Approx. 26*g26g of salt.....

Explanation:

We use the defining quotient....

"concentration"="moles of solute"/"volume of solution"concentration=moles of solutevolume of solution

And thus "moles of solute"="volume"xx"concentraion"moles of solute=volume×concentraion

And for "moles of solute"moles of solute, we gots.....

652*cancel(mL)xx10^-3*cancel(L*mL^-1)xx0.250*mol*cancel(L^-1)=

0.163*mol...

And with respect to "copper sulfate" there is a mass of 0.163*molxx159.61*g*mol^-1=26.0*g...

Of course in an aqueous solution of copper sulfate, the copper is present as [Cu(OH_2)_6]^(2+), a beautifully blue-coloured complex ion.

Jan 17, 2018

m=ul ?g CuSO_4

Explanation:

Given the molarity(M) and the volume(V) of the solution, the number of moles(eta) can be solved using the formula shown below:

M=eta/V

where:

eta=("mass"(m))/("molar mass"(Mm))

Now, plug in this value to the formula. Rearrange formula to isolate eta. Always attached unit to each variable's value to ensure that the desired unit is correctly labeled to the required variable; that is,

M=((m)/(Mm))/V; cross multiply to simplify

MV=m/(Mm; isolate the required variable m

m=MVMm; now, plug in the values of each variable

where:

M=0.250M=(0.250mol)/(L)

V=652cancel(mL)xx(1L)/(1000cancel(mL))=0.652L

Mm_(CuSO_4)=(159.5g)/(mol), obtainable from the periodic table.

m=(0.250cancel(mol))/cancel(L)xx0.652cancel(L)xx(159.5g)/cancel(mol)

m=ul ?g CuSO_4