Answer:
7.19g of fertilizer are required to provide 2.20g of N to a plant
Explanation:
In 100g of fertilizer, the amount of nitrogen could be obtained as follows using the ratio of molar mass of nitrogen*atoms of nitrongen / molar mass of the molecule:
CH4N2O = 53.2g * (14g/mol*2 / 60.06g/mol) = 24.8gN
KNO3 = 24.1g * (14g/mol*1 / 101.10g/mol) = 3.3g N
(NH4)2HPO4 = 11.8g * (14g/mol*2 / 132.06g/mol) = 2.5g N
The mass of nitrogen in 100g of fertilizer is 24.8g + 3.3g + 2.5g = 30.6g N
That is: 30.6g N / 100g of fertilizer.
To obtain 2.20g of nitrogen are required:
2.20g N * (100g Fertilizer / 30.6g N) =