To 20cm3 of a gaseous hydrocarbon. 80cm3 of oxygen were added. After explosion and cooling to room temperature, the residual gases occupied 70cm3. After absorption by KOH, 30cm3 of oxygen remained. Determine the formula of the hydrocarbon.
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What confused me in this question was:
You don't need to know what this does in VCE Chemistry, but a few Google searches suggested KOH reacts with water and carbon dioxide. This makes sense as a combustion with a hydrocarbon will always produce H2O and CO2. First, let's account for what's gone on: For the purposes of this question, I will convert cm3 to mL as it's easier to write
Using the fact that the volume of a gas (V) is directly proportional to the amount of the gas (n) under constant T and P (which is why they said "cooling to room temperature"), then we can say that:
Let the hydrocarbon have the formula: CxHy. Combustion reaction: 2CxHy + 5O2 → aCO2 + bH2O
This yields: a = 6, b = -2, which does not make sense. I'm going to try the question again, with n(CO2) + n(H2O) = 7 mol (70 mL of gas, not subtracting the 30 mL of oxygen) now instead, as the question may have forgot to take that into account!
Result: a = 3, b = 4 Therefore: x = 1.5 and y = 4, which doesn't really make sense, but that means of course the reaction should have been: 2C3H8 + 10O2 → 6CO2 + 8H2O
Kinda complicated - need to work with two balances simultaneously in order to get this one out, not to mention a sloppily written question that screwed us up the first time! (Note: solving simultaneous equations is unlikely to be required by a VCE Chemistry question - only try this if you love maths!) |
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