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stoichiometry quiz 1. solid potassium reacts with chlorine gas to produ…

Question

stoichiometry quiz

  1. solid potassium reacts with chlorine gas to produce potassium chloride. what mass of potassium needs to react if 10.48 g of potassium chloride is formed? (4 points)

\\(2k_{(s)} + cl_{2(g)} \
ightarrow 2kcl_{(s)}\\)

  1. how many moles of \\(co_2\\) are needed to react when do \\(2.41 \times 10^{24}\\) molecules of \\(o_2\\) form? (3 points)

\\(co_{2(g)} \
ightarrow o_{2(g)} + c_{(g)}\\)

  1. propane (\\(c_3h_8\\)) gas burns with oxygen gas. if \\(3.78 \times 10^{23}\\) molecules of water are produced, how many grams of propane reacted? balance the reaction below. (5 points)

\\(\square c_3 h_{8(g)} + \square o_{2(g)} \
ightarrow \square co_{2(g)} + \square h_2 o_{(g)}\\)

Explanation:

Response
Question 1

Step 1: Calculate moles of KCl

Molar mass of KCl: $M(\text{KCl}) = 39.10 + 35.45 = 74.55\ \text{g/mol}$
Moles of KCl: $n(\text{KCl}) = \frac{m(\text{KCl})}{M(\text{KCl})} = \frac{10.48\ \text{g}}{74.55\ \text{g/mol}} \approx 0.1406\ \text{mol}$

Step 2: Relate moles of K and KCl

From the reaction $2\text{K} + \text{Cl}_2
ightarrow 2\text{KCl}$, the mole ratio of $\text{K}:\text{KCl}$ is $2:2 = 1:1$. So $n(\text{K}) = n(\text{KCl}) = 0.1406\ \text{mol}$

Step 3: Calculate mass of K

Molar mass of K: $M(\text{K}) = 39.10\ \text{g/mol}$
Mass of K: $m(\text{K}) = n(\text{K}) \times M(\text{K}) = 0.1406\ \text{mol} \times 39.10\ \text{g/mol} \approx 5.498\ \text{g}$

Step 1: Find moles of $\text{O}_2$

Using Avogadro’s number ($N_A = 6.022 \times 10^{23}\ \text{molecules/mol}$):
$n(\text{O}_2) = \frac{N(\text{O}_2)}{N_A} = \frac{2.41 \times 10^{24}\ \text{molecules}}{6.022 \times 10^{23}\ \text{molecules/mol}} \approx 4.00\ \text{mol}$

Step 2: Relate moles of $\text{CO}_2$ and $\text{O}_2$

From the reaction $\text{CO}_2
ightarrow \text{O}_2 + \text{C}$, the mole ratio of $\text{CO}_2:\text{O}_2$ is $1:1$. So $n(\text{CO}_2) = n(\text{O}_2) = 4.00\ \text{mol}$

Step 1: Balance the reaction

  • Balance C: $1\ \text{C}_3\text{H}_8$ produces $3\ \text{CO}_2$ (so $\text{CO}_2$ coefficient = 3)
  • Balance H: $1\ \text{C}_3\text{H}_8$ has 8 H, so $4\ \text{H}_2\text{O}$ (since $4 \times 2 = 8$; $\text{H}_2\text{O}$ coefficient = 4)
  • Balance O: Right side has $3 \times 2 + 4 \times 1 = 10$ O, so $\text{O}_2$ coefficient = $5$ (since $5 \times 2 = 10$)

Balanced reaction: $\boldsymbol{1}\text{C}_3\text{H}_{8(\text{g})} + \boldsymbol{5}\text{O}_{2(\text{g})}
ightarrow \boldsymbol{3}\text{CO}_{2(\text{g})} + \boldsymbol{4}\text{H}_2\text{O}_{(\text{g})}$

Step 2: Moles of $\text{H}_2\text{O}$

$n(\text{H}_2\text{O}) = \frac{N(\text{H}_2\text{O})}{N_A} = \frac{3.78 \times 10^{23}\ \text{molecules}}{6.022 \times 10^{23}\ \text{molecules/mol}} \approx 0.628\ \text{mol}$

Step 3: Relate moles of $\text{C}_3\text{H}_8$ and $\text{H}_2\text{O}$

Mole ratio of $\text{C}_3\text{H}_8:\text{H}_2\text{O} = 1:4$, so $n(\text{C}_3\text{H}_8) = \frac{n(\text{H}_2\text{O})}{4} = \frac{0.628\ \text{mol}}{4} \approx 0.157\ \text{mol}$

Step 4: Mass of $\text{C}_3\text{H}_8$

Molar mass of $\text{C}_3\text{H}_8$: $3 \times 12.01 + 8 \times 1.008 = 44.094\ \text{g/mol}$
Mass: $m(\text{C}_3\text{H}_8) = 0.157\ \text{mol} \times 44.094\ \text{g/mol} \approx 6.92\ \text{g}$

Answer:

Approximately $\boldsymbol{5.50\ \text{g}}$ (or $5.498\ \text{g}$)

Question 2