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16 May, 17:47

Grains of fine california beach sand are approximately spheres with an average radius of 50 μm and are made of silicon dioxide, which has a density of 2.6 * 103 kg/m3. what mass of sand grains would have a total surface area (the total area of all the individual spheres) equal to the surface area of a cube 1.1 m on an edge?

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  1. 16 May, 18:09
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    The average radius (r) of each grain is r = 50 nanometers = 50*10^-6 meters

    Since it is spherical, so

    Volume = (4/3) * pi*r^3

    V = (4/3) * pi * (50*10^-6) ^3

    V=5.23599*10^-13 m^3

    We are given the Density (ρ) = 2600kg/m^3

    We know that:

    Density (p) = mass (m) / volume (V)

    m = ρV

    So the mass of a single grain is:

    m = 5.23599*10^-13 * 2600 = 1.361357*10^-9 kg

    The surface area of a grain is:

    a = 4*pi*r^2

    a = 4*pi * (50*10^-6) ^2

    a = 3.14*10^-8 m^2

    Since we know the surface area and mass of a grain, the conversion factor is:

    1.361357*10^-9 kg / 3.14*10^-8 m^2

    Find the Surface area of the cube:

    cube = 6a^2

    cube = 6*1.1^2 = 7.26m^2

    multiply this by the converions ratio to get:

    total mass of sand grains = (7.26 m^2 * 1.361357*10^-9 kg) / (3.14*10^-8 m^2)

    total mass of sand grains = 0.3148 kg = 314.80 g
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