A 2 L sample of a gaseous hydrocarbon is burnt in excess oxygen - VCE - SSCE Chemistry - Question 7 - 2004 - Paper 1
Question 7
A 2 L sample of a gaseous hydrocarbon is burnt in excess oxygen. The only products of the reaction are 8 L of CO₂(g) and 10 L of H₂O(g), all at 100°C and 1 atm press... show full transcript
Worked Solution & Example Answer:A 2 L sample of a gaseous hydrocarbon is burnt in excess oxygen - VCE - SSCE Chemistry - Question 7 - 2004 - Paper 1
Step 1
Identify the reaction products
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Answer
The combustion of a hydrocarbon in excess oxygen produces carbon dioxide (CO₂) and water (H₂O). According to the question, the products are 8 L of CO₂ and 10 L of H₂O.
Step 2
Use stoichiometry to find the moles of the reactants
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Answer
Using the ideal gas law, we can relate volume (V) to moles (n) since the temperature and pressure are consistent. The volume of 1 mole of gas at these conditions is approximately 22.4 L. Hence, the moles of products can be calculated as follows:
For CO₂:
nCO2=22.4 L/mol8 L=0.357 mol
For H₂O:
nH2O=22.4 L/mol10 L=0.446 mol
Step 3
Set up the combustion equation
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Answer
The general combustion reaction of a hydrocarbon (CₓHᵧ) can be represented as:
CxHγ+O2→xCO2+2yH2O
From the stoichiometry we can conclude that:
Each mole of carbon produces one mole of CO₂,
Each mole of hydrogen produces half a mole of H₂O.
Step 4
Determine the formula of the hydrocarbon
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From the products:
To produce 8 L (0.357 mol) of CO₂, we need 0.357 moles of carbon, so: x = 0.357.
To produce 10 L (0.446 mol) of H₂O, we need 0.446 moles of hydrogen, so: (y = 2 \times 0.446 = 0.892).
Thus, we have approximately 1 mole of carbon (C) for every 2 moles of hydrogen (H), leading to the empirical formula of C₂H₁₀.
Step 5
Select the correct answer
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Answer
The hydrocarbon formula that matches C₂H₁₀ is option C.