What is the percentage of lithium in lithium carbonate #(Li_2CO_3)#?
1 Answer
Acquiring the percentage requires the usage of "unified" units, meaning units that are equivalent across the board, because a percentage is really a unitless fraction (all the involved units must cancel out).
So, we can use
#\mathbf(%"Li" = "quantity Li"/("quantity Li"_2"CO"_3)xx100%)#
#= \mathbf("quantity Li"/("quantity Li" + "quantity C" + "quantity O")xx100%)# where the "quantity" can be any chosen unified unit, as long as we use the same units for both lithium and lithium carbonate.
The atomic masses needed are
#"Li"# : we only know a range (#6.938~6.997# ) with decent certainty, so let's choose#"6.94 g/mol";# #"C"# :#"12.011 g/mol",# #"O"# :#"15.999 g/mol".#
Therefore, the total mass of lithium carbonate (
#= 2*6.94 + 12.011 + 3*15.999#
#=# #color(green)("73.888 g/mol")# .
Now, we use the mass of lithium in the compound to determine the percentage of it in the compound.
Given that a subscript
#color(blue)(%"Li") = "quantity Li"/("quantity Li"_2"CO"_3)xx100%#
#= (2*6.94 cancel"g/mol" "Li")/(73.888 cancel"g/mol" "Li"_2"CO"_3)xx100%#
#= color(blue)(18.8%),# rounded to three sig figs.