Question #7071f
1 Answer
Explanation:
The trick here is to realize the every sample of sodium bromide, regardless of its mass, will contain
This is true because sodium and bromide always combine in definite proportions, i.e. stable ratios by mass, to form sodium bromide.
Now, a
#"100 g " - " 22.34 g" = "77.66 g Br"#
Therefore, you can say that the mass ratio that exists between sodium and bromine in any sample of sodium bromide will be
#"22.34 g Na"/"77.66 g Br" = 22.34 / 77.66#
You can thus use this definite proportion to say that a
#5.69 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("g NaBr"))) * "22.34 g Na"/(100color(red)(cancel(color(black)("g NaBr")))) = "1.271 g Na" = color(green)(bar(ul(|color(white)(a/a)color(black)("1.27 g Na")color(white)(a/a)|)))#
The answer is rounded to three sig figs.
You can use the known definite proportion to find the mass of bromide present in the sample
#1.271 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("g NaBr"))) * "77.66 g Br"/(22.34 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("g NaBr")))) = "4.42 g Br"#
This checks out because
#overbrace("5.69 g")^(color(blue)("mass of NaBr sample")) - overbrace("1.27 g")^(color(purple)("mass of Na")) = overbrace("4.42 g")^(color(darkgreen)("mass of Br"))#