There are 24 moles of Carbon (C) in 2 moles of table sugar (sucrose)
Pure soda has no sugar.
TWO
9 moles contain 54,199267713.10e23 molecules.
This depends on the specific recipe of a producer.
There are 24 moles of Carbon (C) in 2 moles of table sugar (sucrose)
Pure soda has no sugar.
There are 12 carbon atoms in one molecule of sugar (C12H22O11). Therefore, in 2 moles of sugar, there would be 12 * 2 * 2 = 48 moles of carbon. To convert moles to grams, you would multiply the number of moles by the molar mass of carbon (12 g/mol), so there would be 48 * 12 = 576 grams of carbon in 2 moles of sugar.
No.
It depends on how many grams of sugar are in the specific soda. You would take the number of grams stated on the can and divide by the molar mass of sugar (about 342 grams). That is the number of moles of sugar in can of soda. Grams of sugar in can/342
One can of soda typically contains around 40 grams of sugar. To calculate the number of moles of sugar, divide the mass of sugar by its molar mass (180.16 g/mol for C6H12O6). This would give roughly 0.22 moles of sugar in one can of soda.
TWO
Assuming complete combustion, one mole of sugar produces 11 moles of water.
2 grams per serving
9 moles contain 54,199267713.10e23 molecules.
This depends on the specific recipe of a producer.
C12H24O12 is the chemical formula of lactose monohydrate. The answer is 0,12 moles.