Aafia said:
My mistake . I got the answer. So 6.05 moles of H2 require 12.1 moles of HCl
12.1mol×36.5g/mol= 441.65g Now dividing it by w/w percentage as given 441.65÷0.27=1635.74 Density = m/V or V= Density×m Therefore V=1864.7cm^3 This is the answer I got but I have a question that why do we divide the mass by w/w percentage?
The chemistry is finished, it only remains to find what volume of the given solution contains 441.65 g but you are having difficulty with arithmetic of masses and volumes, usually learned around age 10. (Not uncommon you may be relieved to hear.)
You need to render yourself confident and independent of help for this kind of arithmetical calculation which is often asked and a frequent necessity in practice. If you can't do the required calculation one trick* is try the same calculation for a simplified version of the problem. E.g. suppose you had to get 500g of HCl from a solution that was 0.5g/g by weight and the density of the mixture was say 2 g/ml how would you do that?
Secondly you need to practice the habit of habitualLy checking your calculations for qualitative and rough quantitative reasonableness. E.g you have about 1600 g of the HCl-water mixture . But this is
denser than 1g/ml so the HCl is contained in
less than 1600 ml instead of more as you have.
By avoidable mistakes like this you can easily do most of the work right and get only a little credit. (At my school we were told if you noticed your exam answer unreasonable and couldn't find and correct the mistake in time, to just make a note that the result was unreasonable.)
And although book answers are not infallible and we have often enough here found mistakes in them, the big difference between your answer and the book one you quoted earlier is a warning to be careful.
Using your figures I calculated a volume of 1434.86 ml. This is close to the book answer, but not identical. Probably the discrepancy arises through using the same approximate atomic masses you did and it looks like the difference between these and the accurate ones is of about the right amount. So when you realize how to calculate this, use the accurate 1.00794 for H and 35.453 for Cl.
*This is useful for far more advanced work than the present, and is found is a short, cheap, popular and very helpful book "How to solve it" by Polya.