Important válues if needed for this question. The freezing point of benzene, CH, is 5.500 °C at 1 atmosphere. K(benzene) = 5.12 °C/m In a laboratory experiment, students synthesized a new compound and found that when 10.98 grams of the compound were dissolved in 226.7 grams of benzene, the solution began to freeze at 4.640 °C. The compound was also found to be nonvolatile and a non-electrolyte. What is the molecular weight they determined for this compound? g/mol

Chemistry: An Atoms First Approach
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Author:Steven S. Zumdahl, Susan A. Zumdahl
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Chapter10: Properties Of Solutions
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The freezing point of benzene, CH,, is 5.500 °C at 1 atmosphere. K(benzene) = 5.12 °C/m
In a laboratory experiment, students synthesized a new compound and found that when 10.98 grams of the compound were dissolved in 226.7 grams of
benzene, the solution began to freeze at 4.640 °C. The compound was also found to be nonvolatile and a non-electrolyte.
What is the molecular weight they determined for this compound?
g/mol
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Transcribed Image Text:[Review Topics] [References] Use the References to access important values if needed for this question. The freezing point of benzene, CH,, is 5.500 °C at 1 atmosphere. K(benzene) = 5.12 °C/m In a laboratory experiment, students synthesized a new compound and found that when 10.98 grams of the compound were dissolved in 226.7 grams of benzene, the solution began to freeze at 4.640 °C. The compound was also found to be nonvolatile and a non-electrolyte. What is the molecular weight they determined for this compound? g/mol Submit Answer Retry Entire Group 9 more group attempts remaining Previous Next
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