(A). The number of Coulombs in one fundamental charge of an electron is,
[tex]1e\text{ = 1.}6\times10^{-19}\text{ C}[/tex](B). The charge in terms of the number of electrons is,
[tex]q=ne[/tex]where q is the net charge, e is the fundamental charge and n is the number of electrons,
For the net charge of q = 1 Coulomb, the number of electrons is,
[tex]\begin{gathered} 1\text{ C=n}\times1.6\times10^{-19}\text{ C} \\ n=\frac{1}{1.6\times10^{-19}} \\ n=0.625\times10^{19} \\ n=6.25\times10^{18}\text{ } \end{gathered}[/tex]Thus, the number of electrons in the 1 Coulomb of charge is,
[tex]6.25\times10^{18}[/tex]