How many moles of chlorine are present in 2.47 g of phosphorus pentachloride?

1 Answer
Feb 11, 2018

#0.0592# moles of #Cl#.

Explanation:

In this type of question it is important to define whether you are looking for a "mole" of atomic chlorine (one atom - #Cl#) or a mole of the normal form of the diatomic gas chlorine, #Cl_2#.

For this problem I will stick with the pure atomic definition, that is, a single chlorine atom. The results can be halved to obtain the gas molecule version, if you like.

#PCl_5# has 5 moles of Cl per compound mole. One mole of #PCl_5# has a molecular weight of #(208.5g)/"mole"#.

Thus, #2.47g# is #2.47/208.5 = 0.01185# moles of #PCl_5#.

With a 5:1 ratio of Cl to compound, that is:
#0.01185 xx 5 = 0.0592# moles of #Cl#.