
Significant Figures in Unit Conversions
Authored by GWYNNETH MORTEL
Chemistry
10th Grade
Used 5+ times

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5 questions
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1.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 2 pts
How many significant figures should be used when converting 12.34 grams of a substance to moles?
3 significant figures
4 significant figures
5 significant figures
2 significant figures
Answer explanation
When converting 12.34 grams to moles, the number of significant figures in the original measurement determines the result. Since 12.34 has 4 significant figures, the conversion should also use 4 significant figures.
2.
MULTIPLE SELECT QUESTION
45 sec • 1 pt
If you have 0.00560 moles of a compound, how many significant figures should the mass in grams have?
1 significant figures
2 significant figures
3 significant figures
4 significant figures
Answer explanation
The number 0.00560 has 3 significant figures (5, 6, and the trailing 0). Therefore, the mass in grams should also be reported with 3 significant figures to maintain consistency in precision.
3.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 2 pts
When converting 0.0450 grams to moles, how many significant figures should the result have?
1 significant figure
2 significant figures
3 significant figures
4 significant figures
Answer explanation
The number 0.0450 grams has 3 significant figures: the '4' and '5' are significant, and the trailing '0' after the decimal point is also significant. Therefore, when converting to moles, the result should retain 3 significant figures.
4.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 2 pts
Why is it important to maintain significant figures in chemical calculations?
To ensure precision and accuracy
To reduce the number of calculations
To make calculations easier
To avoid using a calculator
Answer explanation
Maintaining significant figures in chemical calculations is crucial to ensure precision and accuracy. It reflects the certainty of measurements and helps avoid misleading results, making the data reliable for scientific analysis.
5.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 2 pts
What is the rule for significant figures when multiplying or dividing measurements?
Use the most significant figures
Use the average number of significant figures
Use the least number of significant figures
Use the highest number of significant figures
Answer explanation
When multiplying or dividing measurements, the result should have the same number of significant figures as the measurement with the least number of significant figures. Therefore, the correct choice is to use the least number of significant figures.
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