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Dima020 [189]
2 years ago
10

A certain chemical reaction releases 362.kj of heat energy per mole of reactant consumed. Suppose some moles of the reactant are

put into a calorimeter (a device for measuring heat flow). It takes 4.87j of heat energy to raise the temperature of this calorimeter by 5.5 C . Now the reaction is run until all the reactant is gone, and the temperature of the calorimeter is found to rise by . How would you calculate the number of moles of reactant that were consumed?
Set the math up. But don't do any of it. Just leave your answer as a math expression.

Also, be sure your answer includes all the correct unit symbols.
Chemistry
1 answer:
Serjik [45]2 years ago
6 0

Answer:

The math is explained below. You need to include the amount by which the temperature of the calorimeter is found to rise by, which is missing on the quetion.

Explanation:

The amount that temperature of the calorimeter is found to rise is missing. So, I will do the math for a general amount X, and then will assume certain value to show the final calculation.

<u>1) Data from the calorimeter:</u>

  • Raise of temperature of the calorimeter: X
  • Ratio heat consumed: 4.87 J / 5.5°C (given)
  • Energy absorbed by the calorimeter when its temperature increased X°:

              (4.87 J / 5.5°C ) × X

<u>2) Data from the reaction:</u>

  • 362 kJ / mol of reactant
  • number of moles of reactant: n
  • Total amount of energy released by the reaction:

        362 kJ/mol × 1,000J/Kj × n = 362,000n J

3) By the <u>law of conservation of the energy,</u> assuming the calorimeter does not release energy to the surroundings, you equal the energy released by the reaction to the energy absorbed by the calorimeter when its temperature raised X°.

  • 362,000 n =  (4.87 J / 5.5°C ) × X

  • Solve for n: n = (4.87 / 5.5)X / 362,000

         n = 0.000002446 X

That means that for every degree the temperature of the calorimeter is found to increase, the number of moles of reactant consumed are 0.000002446 moles.

<u>Example:</u>

So, if the temperature of the calorimeter is raised by 100°C, the number of moles of reactant will be:

  • n = 0.000002446 × 100 = 0.0002446 mol

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What is the molality of a solution in which 3.0 moles of NaCl is dissolved in 1.5 Kg of water?
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Density H2O = 1g/cm³
1,5 kg H2O = 1500g = 1500cm³             (1dm³ = 1000cm³)

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What mitigation measures can communities do to reduce the damage and impact of sudden geologic hazards?
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4 0
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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
tiny-mole [99]

Answer:

The percent yield of this reaction is 70%

Explanation:

The reaction is: N₂ + 3H₂ → 2NH₃

We only have the mass of H₂, so we assume that N₂ is in excess

We convert the mass to moles, to work with the reaction:

450 g . 1mol / 2 g = 225 moles

Ratio is 2:3. 3 moles of H₂ can produce 2 moles of ammonia

Therefore 225 moles of H₂ will produce (225 .2)/ 3 = 150 moles

This is the 100% yield reaction → We convert the moles of NH₃ to mass

150 mol . 17g /1mol = 2550 g

Percent yield = (Produced yield/Theoretical yield) .100

Percent yield = (1575g/2550g) . 100 = 70%

7 0
2 years ago
A sample of gas contains 6.25 × 10-3 mol in a 500.0 mL flask at 265°C. What is the pressure of the gas in kilopascals? Which var
RideAnS [48]

55.9 kPa; Variables given = volume (V), moles (n), temperature (T)

We must calculate <em>p</em> from <em>V, n</em>, and <em>T</em>, so we use <em>the Ideal Gas Law</em>:

<em>pV = nRT</em>

Solve for <em>p</em>: <em>p = nRT/V</em>

R = 8.314 kPa.L.K^(-1).mol^(-1)

<em>T</em> = (265 + 273.15) K = 538.15 K

<em>V</em> = 500.0 mL = 0.5000 L

∴ <em>p</em> = [6.25 x 10^(-3) mol x 8.314 kPa·L·K^(-1)·mol^(-1) x 538.15 K]/(0.5000 L) = 55.9 kPa

4 0
2 years ago
Read 2 more answers
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