Solving 0.005M Na2CO3 Chemistry Problem

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To prepare a 250.00 mL solution of 0.005M Na2CO3, one needs to calculate the required mass of pure Na2CO3. The correct approach involves using the formula for moles, where moles equal molarity multiplied by volume in liters, leading to the need for 0.02 moles of sodium carbonate. The molar mass of Na2CO3 is then used to convert moles to grams for the final mass calculation. Clarifications were made regarding the correct formula for calculating moles, confirming that it is indeed molarity multiplied by volume. The discussion ultimately resolved the confusion around the calculations needed for the solution preparation.
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[SOLVED] Chemistry Problem

The question is
Calculate the mass of pure Na2CO3 needed for the preparation of 250.00mL of a 0.005M standard carbonate solution.

when it says PURE Na2CO3, what molarity does it mean? is it 1M??

my guess is to use M1V1 = M2V2 to solve
my final volume is 250mL
final concentration is 0.005 M
and if the pure Na2CO3 means 1M then that would be what i would be using as my stock right? then i would solve for the volume of that stock i need. After that I would use the density of Na2CO3 to find the mass

is that right?
 
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Find out how many moles of sodium carbonate you will need to make up this solution.
Hint: #moles = molarity(moles/L)/volume(L)
 
so I figured that I will need 0.005M/0.25L = 0.02 mol of carbonate

now I use the molar mass of sodium carbonate to find the mass ??
 
yes, correct.
 
Thanks!
 
wait.. i thought molarity is found by (mol/L) x L?
and not (mol/L) / L


?
 
i mean moles is found by (mol/L) x L
 
What is your question?
 
before, you said that #moles = molarity(moles/L)/volume(L)

i thought #moles = molarity(moles/L) x volume(L)??
 
  • #10
higherme you are correct, Molarity = mol/L;
so mol = M x L

probably a typo in the reply before. then multiply by Molar mass to get grams
 
  • #11
Yes higherme, you are correct. Definitely a 'typo' (screwup) on my part...
 

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