Moles in a Cat: Calculating Atoms in 12 kg

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SUMMARY

The discussion focuses on calculating the number of moles of atoms in a 12 kg cat, utilizing the atomic masses of hydrogen (1.0 u), oxygen (16.0 u), and carbon (12.0 u). It is established that approximately 80% of a cat's mass is water, leading to the conclusion that a 5 kg cat contains about 222 moles of water and 83.3 moles of carbon, resulting in a total of approximately 305 moles of atoms. The calculations leverage Avogadro's number (6.022 x 10^23) and the conversion of mass to grams for accurate mole calculations.

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GingerBread27
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I have to approximately figure out, to the nearest order of magnitude, how many moles of atoms there are in a 12 kg cat.You are also told that The masses of a hydrogen atom, an oxygen atom, and a carbon atom are 1.0 u, 16 u, and 12 u. .

all i know is that 1 u=1.66 x 10^-27 kg.
From here I am unsure where to go.
 
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1 mole contains an Avogadro's amount of atoms (Avogadro's no = 6.022 x 10^23), that should help you a bit.
 
Yes I knew that before working on this problem and yet I'm still lost.
 
In what proportion are the main ingrediants found in the cat (ie cat's are 80% water). If you know the mass the proportion of the three elements then you should eb able to find number of moles of atoms.
 
I have no other information besides what I wrote before.
 
Then make some assumptions or do some research. How much water is in a cat? Once you know that you can 'assume' the rest or a portion of the rest is carbon. Once you know how much water is in a cat and the mass of the cat you can easily calculate the moles og H and O. Once you make your assumption about C then you'll be able to calculate the number of C atoms.
 
http://www.sniksnak.com/cathealth/howto9.html

The above link says: "...Water comprises from about 95 percent of the new-born kitten to about 75 percent of the adult cat..."

So you have H and O...maybe an estimate is in order?

Im having difficulty with the same problem ;-). I PMed you GingerBread27 with a question FYI :-). Best of luck.
 
k, i just did the problem myself...follow me...

H= 1.0u
O= 16.0u
C= 12.0u

we don't know the age of the kitten so let's say roughtly 80% of the given cat is water

in my version of the problem, my cat is 5 kg...therefore

80% x 5 kg = 4 kg = amount of H20

convert to grams...(habit from chemistry)

4kg = 4000g

4000gH20 x (1 mol H20/ 18g H20) = 222 mol H20

we have 1 kg of the 'cat' unallocated therefore let the remaining carbon equal the 1 kg

1000gC x (1 mol C / 12g C) = 83.3 mol C

total 'molage' => 222+83 = 305 mol

and i was told by my school online software that this was correct. hope this helps...if i made a mistake i apologize - its 1:40 am! Cheerz.
 

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