Another Chemistry Question (1 Viewer)

qwertywerido

Member
Joined
Apr 25, 2021
Messages
62
Gender
Female
HSC
2022
Did this question twice, anyone mind telling me what l did wrong.
1643063192162.png
thanks !
 

4321suomynona

Member
Joined
Aug 7, 2020
Messages
87
Gender
Male
HSC
2022
Prolly because u took the charge of silver as +2 and not +1. In HSC chemistry its usually +1. I rmb doing this same mistake where i searched up on google what is the charge of the silver ion and it said +2, and iirc my teacher said dont do that.
 

jazz519

Moderator
Moderator
Joined
Feb 25, 2015
Messages
1,955
Location
Sydney
Gender
Male
HSC
2016
Uni Grad
2021
Did this question twice, anyone mind telling me what l did wrong.
View attachment 34771
thanks !
Ag2S (s) < -- > 2Ag+(aq) + S2-(aq)

8.0 x 10^-51 = [Ag+]^2 [S2-]
8.0 x 10^-51 = (2x)^2 (x)
8.0 x 10^-51 = 4x^3
x = 1.2599210498949 x 10^-17

This is the molar solubility of Ag2S. What you did next overcomplicates the subsequent working for the question. This number represents c(Ag2S)

c(Ag2S) = 1.2599210498949 x 10^-17
n(Ag2S) = cv = (1.2599210498949 x 10^-17)(1.0) = 1.2599210498949 x 10^-17 moles
m(Ag2S) = n x MM = 1.2599210498949 x 10^-17 x (107.9x2+32.07)
m(Ag2S) = 3.1229663 x 10^-15 g
 

jazz519

Moderator
Moderator
Joined
Feb 25, 2015
Messages
1,955
Location
Sydney
Gender
Male
HSC
2016
Uni Grad
2021
Prolly because u took the charge of silver as +2 and not +1. In HSC chemistry its usually +1. I rmb doing this same mistake where i searched up on google what is the charge of the silver ion and it said +2, and iirc my teacher said dont do that.
Although their equation is written wrong without the charges displayed, the formula Ag2S uses Ag+ so this is not the mistake
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 1)

Top