take this percent composition and figure out the substance’s empirical formula.
Here’s how you do it.
Imagine, first, that you have 100 g of the substance.
- If you have 100 g of the substance, and it’s 75% mercury by mass, then
you’ve got 75 g of mercury, right? Since the atomic weight of mercury is
about 200 amu (which means that 1 mole of mercury atoms weighs 200 g),
you’ve got mole = 0.375 mole of mercury atoms in a 100 g
sample.
If you have 100 g of the substance, and it’s 25% chlorine by mass, then
you’ve got 25 g of chlorine. Since the atomic weight of chlorine is about 35
amu (which means that 1 mole of chlorine atoms weighs 35 g), you’ve got
= 0.700 moles of chlorine atoms in the 100 g sample.
- If you’ve got 0.375 moles of mercury atoms and 0.700 moles of
chlorine atoms, then the ratio of chlorine to mercury atoms is
(which is close to 2:1), which means the empirical formula is HgCl 2.
Finding Moles
When finding moles of a
diatomic element such as
chlorine in a compound,
use its atomic weight, not
its formula weight in the
calculation.
Now review everything we’ve told you about molecules and moles, and answer
the following questions. The answers can be found in Part III.