Answer: The moles of oxygen and carbon dioxide in air is [tex]3.63\times 10^{19}mol[/tex] and [tex]7.18\times 10^{16}mol[/tex] respectively
Explanation:
To calculate the number of moles, we use the equation:
[tex]\text{Number of moles}=\frac{\text{Given mass}}{\text{Molar mass}}[/tex]
Given mass of atmosphere = [tex]5.00\times 10^{18}kg=5.00\times 10^{21}g[/tex]
Average molar mass of atmosphere = 28.96 g/mol
Putting values in above equation, we get:
[tex]\text{Moles of atmosphere}=\frac{5.00\times 10^{21}g}{28.96g/mol}=1.73\times 10^{20}mol[/tex]
We know that:
Percent of oxygen in air = 21 %
Percent of carbon dioxide in air = 0.0415 %
Moles of oxygen in air = [tex]\frac{21}{100}\times 1.73\times 10^{20}=3.63\times 10^{19}mol[/tex]
Moles of carbon dioxide in air = [tex]\frac{0.0415}{100}\times 1.73\times 10^{20}=7.18\times 10^{16}mol[/tex]
Hence, the moles of oxygen and carbon dioxide in air is [tex]3.63\times 10^{19}mol[/tex] and [tex]7.18\times 10^{16}mol[/tex] respectively