A compound containing Ti and Chlorine

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The discussion revolves around determining the simplest formula of a compound containing titanium (Ti) and chlorine (Cl) based on the conversion of Ti into TiO2 and Cl into AgCl. The initial calculations show that 1.20g of TiO2 corresponds to 0.015 moles of Ti and 6.45g of AgCl corresponds to 0.045 moles of Cl. To find the empirical formula, the moles are divided by the smaller value, resulting in a ratio of 1:3, leading to the conclusion that the simplest formula is TiCl3. The presence of AgCl and TiO2 is primarily for analytical purposes, as they help verify the amounts of chloride ions and titanium in the compound. The discussion emphasizes the importance of understanding the role of these compounds in the analysis rather than their direct contribution to the formula.
Lindy12
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This is the question am working on... A compound containing Ti and Chlorine is analyzed by converting all the Ti into 1.20g of TiO2 and all the chlorine into 6.45g of AgCl. What is the simplest formula...?

This is what I've done so far:
Moles of TiO2 = 1.20g/80g/mol = 0.015

Moles of AgCl 6.45g/143.4g/mol = 0.045

Am I on the right track? What do I do from here??
 
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Welcome to PF Lindy12!

The moles that you have calculated are the same as mine. However, I found the percentage mass of each element in each compound to find my answers. The point is (to my knowledge) it might not always work the way you have done it. You may need the percentage masses to be sure of what you have and what you are working with.

Knowing these moles you can find the empirical formula by dividing both by the smaller of the two to give you a ratio that will give you the formula.

The Bob (2004 ©)
 
Thanks The Bob :)
I'm really struggling with chemistry, as you can tell.

So, I went on to take 0.015 mol/0.015 mol = 1
and then 0.045 mol/0.015 mol = 3

So my final answer is TiCl3

What does the silver and oxygen have to do with the question?
 
Awesome! Thank you :)
 
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