answer.
Ask question
Login Signup
Ask question
All categories
  • English
  • Mathematics
  • Social Studies
  • Business
  • History
  • Health
  • Geography
  • Biology
  • Physics
  • Chemistry
  • Computers and Technology
  • Arts
  • World Languages
  • Spanish
  • French
  • German
  • Advanced Placement (AP)
  • SAT
  • Medicine
  • Law
  • Engineering
irina1246 [14]
1 year ago
11

A student performs an experiment to determine the volume of hydrogen gas produced when a given mass of magnesium reacts with exc

ess HCl(aq), as represented by the net ionic equation above. The student begins with a 0.0360 g sample of pure magnesium and a solution of 2.0 M HCl(aq). (a) Calculate the number of moles of magnesium in the 0.0360 g sample. b) Calculate the number of moles of HCl(aą) needed to react completely with the sample of magnesium. As the magnesium reacts, the hydrogen gas produced is collected by water displacement at 23.0°'C. The pressure of the gas in the collection tube is measured to be 749 torr (c) Given that the equilibrium vapor pressure of water is 21 torr at 23.0°C, calculate the pressure produced in the reaction would have if it were dry. (d) Calculate the volume, in liters measured at the conditions in the laboratory, that the Hy(e) produced in the reaction would have if it were dry (e) The laboratory procedure specified that the concentration of the HCl solution be 2.0 M, but only 12.3 M HCl solution was available. Describe the steps for safely preparing 50.0 mL of 2.0 M HCKag) using 12.3 M HCI solution and materials selected from the list below. Show any necessary calculation(s). Distilled water 10.0 mL graduated cylinder Balance 250 mL beakers Dropper 50.00 mL volumetric flask
Chemistry
1 answer:
ira [324]1 year ago
3 0

Answer:

(a) 0.0015 mol Mg

(b) 0.0030 mol HCl

(c) 728 torr

(d) 0.038 L

(e) See below

Explanation:

This problem is a calculation based on the stoichiometry for the reaction:

2 H⁺ (aq)  + 2 Cl⁻ + Mg   ⇒   Mg²⁺ (aq) + 2 Cl⁻ (aq) + H₂ (g)

Given the mass of Mg reacted, we have:

Atomic Weight Mg = 24.3 g/mol

(a) Mole Mg reacted = mass/AW = 0.0360 g/ 24.3  g/mol =  0.0015 mol

(b) Moles HCl needed:

2 mol HCl/ 1 mol Mg  x 0.0015 mol Mg = 0.0030 mol HCl

(c) Since we are collecting the Hydrogen gas produced in the reaction over water we need to substract the water vapor pressure from the pressure measured in the lab to obtain the dry pressure:

Pdry = 749 torr - 21 torr = 728 torr

(d) The volume of the Hydrogen gas is obtained from the ideal gas law since we know the temperature and the dry pressure:

PV = nRT ∴ V = nRT/ P

we would need first  to convert the pressure to atmospheres:

P= 728 torr x  1 atm/760 torr = 0.96 atm

Then,

mol H₂ gas produced:

From the balanced chemical equation,

1 mol H2/ 1 mol Mg x 0.015 mol Mg = 0.0015 mol

Now we have all we need to calculate the volume:

V = 0.0015 mol x 0.0821 Latm/Kmol x (23 + 273) K/ 0.96 atm = 0.038 L

(e ) When handling acids such as HCl it is required the use of safety goggles, acid resistant gloves and lab coat. It is also required to work under a safety hood since the vapors of HCl are toxic when inhaled.

To prepare 50.0 mL 2.0 M solution from the 12.3 M we will dilute it according to the following calculation:

V₁M₁ = V₂M₂  ⇒ V₁ = V₂M₂ /M₁

where V₁ is the volume of the 12.3 M HCl solution we are going to dilute, and V₂ is the 50.0 mL solution 2.0 M needed.

V₁ = 50.0 mL x 2.0 M / 12.3 M = 8.13 mL

Notice that in the above equation we do not need to convert the mL to L since V appears in both sides of the equation  and will give us the volume in mL.

Now 8.13 mL is difficult to measure  with a 10 ml graduated cylinder where we can read to 0.2 mL unless we accept the error.

So we need to calculate the mass of concentrated acid required by computing its density

We can calculate the density of the 12.3 M solution using a tared  10 mL graduated  by taking  say 10 mL of the the solution, weighting it, and calculating the density = mass of solution / volume.

Knowing the density we can calculate the mass of 12.3 M a volume of 8.13 mL weighs.

Place approximately 35 mL of distilled water in the volumetric flask and  tare  in the balance.

Add  say 7 mL  of 12.3 M HCl in the graduated cylinder  to the volumetric flask being careful  towards the end  to add  the last portions using the dropper to complete the required mass using   the balance.

Finally dilute to the 50 mL mark.

Again use all of the safety precautions indicated above and avoid any contact of the acid with the skin.

You might be interested in
A student wants to form 2‑hexanol using acidic hydration. He finds four alkenes in the inventory cabinet that could be possible
julia-pushkina [17]

Answer:

Look on the picture.

Explanation:

He could find only 2 isomers of n-hexane alkenes for this reaction. Other two could be marked from other direction.

8 0
2 years ago
Which of the following contributes the most hydronium ions to a solution? weak acid strong acid weak base strong base
zavuch27 [327]
The correct answer is the second option. A strong acid contributes the most hydronium ions in a solution. When an acid is in aqueous form, it dissociates into ions namely where one of the ions are hydronium ions. If the acid is a strong one, the ions dissociates completely contributing more hydronium ions.
4 0
1 year ago
The correct answer(reported to the proper number of significant figures)to the following is
LenKa [72]
to the proper number of significant figures) to the following? (12.67+19.2)(3.99)/(1.36+ 11.366).
8 0
1 year ago
I NEED HELP ASAP, WILL MARK BRAINLEST!
Andre45 [30]

Answer:

1. 90%

2. 217.4 g O₂

3. 95.0%

4. Trial 2 ratios

Explanation:

Original: SiCl₄ + O₂ → SiO₂ + Cl₂

Balanced: SiCl₄ + O₂ → SiO₂ + 2Cl₂

Trial        SiCl₄                   O₂                    SiO₂

 1           120 g                  240 g              38.2 g

 2           75 g                   50 g                25.2 g

<u>Percentage yield for trial 1</u>

We need to get actual yield (38.2 g) and theoretical yield, in grams.

Mass to moles:

 molar mass SiCl₄: 28.09 + 4(35.45) = 169.9 g/mol

 120 g SiCl₄ x 1 mol/169.9 g = .706 mol SiCl₄

Moles to moles:

 For each mole SiCl₄, we have one mol SiO₂ based on the balanced rxn.

 .706 mol SiCl₄ = .706 mol SiO₂

Moles to mass:

 molar mass SiO₂: 28.09 + 2(16.00) = 60.09 g/mol

 .706 mol SiO₂ x 60.09g/mol = 42.44 g SiO₂

Theoretical yield:

 actual/theoretical x 100

 38.2 / 42.44 = .900 = <u>90.0% yield</u>

<u>Leftover reactant for trial 1</u>

We know oxygen is the excess reactant.

Mass to moles:

 molar mass O₂ = 32.00 g/mol

 240 g O₂ x 1 mol/32.00 g = 7.5 mol O₂

We used .706 mol SiO₂, so we also used .706 mol O₂.

 7.5 - .706 = 6.8 moles left over

Moles to mass:

 6.8 mol O₂ x 32.00g/mol =<u> 217.4 g O₂</u>

<u />

<u>Percentage yield for trial 2</u>

Mass to moles:

 molar mass SiCl₄: 169.9 g/mol

 75 g SiCl₄ x 1 mol/169.9 g = .441 mol SiCl₄

Moles to moles:

 For each mole SiCl₄, we have one mol SiO₂ based on the balanced rxn.

 .441 mol SiCl₄ = .441 mol SiO₂

Moles to mass:

 molar mass SiO₂: 60.09 g/mol

 .441 mol SiO₂ x 60.09g/mol = 26.5 g SiO₂

Theoretical yield:

 actual/theoretical x 100

 25.2 / 26.5 = .950 = <u>95.0% yield</u>

Because the percentage yield of trial 2 is higher than that of trial 1, we know that the ratio of reactants in trial 2 is more efficient! We got a result closer to our theoretical yield.

6 0
2 years ago
Describe the changes in properties (from metals to nonmetals or from nonmetals to metals) as we move (a) down a periodic group a
defon

Answer:

Explanation:

The changes in properties from metals to non-metals on a periodic table can be measured and determined by the metallicity or electropositivity of elements.

Metallicity is a measure of the tendency of atoms of an element to lose electrons.

a.

Down a periodic group, metallicity increases.

b.

Across a period from left to right electropositivity or metallicity decreases.

Metals are found in the left part of periodic table and the most reactive metal sits in the lower left corner. Non-metals are towards the right side of the table.

7 0
1 year ago
Other questions:
  • A group of students are wandering around a room. when their teacher claps, the students sit down wherever they are. this situati
    6·2 answers
  • What is the angle between the carbon-oxygen bond and one of the carbon-fluorine bonds in the carbonyl fluoride ( cof2 ) molecule
    5·2 answers
  • The human eye is a complex sensing device for visible light. The optic nerve needs a minimum of 2.0 × 10−17 J of energy to trigg
    7·2 answers
  • A 52.0 g of Copper (specific heat=0.0923cal/gC) at 25.0C is warmed by the addition of 299 calories of energy. find the final tem
    9·1 answer
  • Sodium carbonate (Na2CO3) is available in very pure form and can be used to standardize acid solutions. What is the molarity of
    10·1 answer
  • Consider the following reaction (assume an ideal gas mixture): 2NOBr(g) 2NO(g) + Br2(g)A 1.0-liter vessel was initially filled w
    15·1 answer
  • The reaction N2 + 3 H2 → 2 NH3 is used to produce ammonia. When 450. g of hydrogen was reacted with nitrogen, 1575 g of ammonia
    5·1 answer
  • One million argon atoms is how many mol of argon atoms? (2 significant figures)
    5·1 answer
  • If the heat released during condensation goes only to warming the iron block, what is the final temperature (in ∘C) of the iron
    5·1 answer
  • A water tank can hold 1 m3 of water. When it’s empty, how much liters is needed to refill it?
    14·1 answer
Add answer
Login
Not registered? Fast signup
Signup
Login Signup
Ask question!