dahmsom Full Member 7+ Year Member Aug 27, 2015 #1 Advertisement - Members don't see this ad I was wondering how they got 0.25 mols of h2. I know for every 2 moles of electron is consumed 1 mole of the hydrogen is produced. How is 0.25 mols of hydrogen gas calculated ??
Advertisement - Members don't see this ad I was wondering how they got 0.25 mols of h2. I know for every 2 moles of electron is consumed 1 mole of the hydrogen is produced. How is 0.25 mols of hydrogen gas calculated ??
popopopop Membership Revoked Removed 10+ Year Member Aug 29, 2015 #2 http://www.chem.purdue.edu/gchelp/howtosolveit/Electrochem/Electrolysis.htm Follow the formula on how they got mols of Fe(s) and you should get .25 mols of H2 also. Upvote 0 Downvote
http://www.chem.purdue.edu/gchelp/howtosolveit/Electrochem/Electrolysis.htm Follow the formula on how they got mols of Fe(s) and you should get .25 mols of H2 also.
T TheGuru789 Full Member 7+ Year Member Aug 30, 2015 #3 I'm getting 0.5 g as well, OP did figure it out?! (6*3600 sec)*(2 Amps)/(96500/2)*(2g/mol)=0.45 g, no? Upvote 0 Downvote
I'm getting 0.5 g as well, OP did figure it out?! (6*3600 sec)*(2 Amps)/(96500/2)*(2g/mol)=0.45 g, no?
popopopop Membership Revoked Removed 10+ Year Member Aug 30, 2015 #4 ^OP asked for how they got .25 mols, which is .5 grams. I got confused by your post a bit lol. Last edited: Aug 30, 2015 Upvote 0 Downvote