CHEMISTRY >CUSTOM<
CHEMISTRY >CUSTOM<
14th Edition
ISBN: 9781259137815
Author: Julia Burdge
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Education
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Chapter 23, Problem 62AP

A 0.450-g sample of steel contains manganese as an impurity. The sample is dissolved in acidic solution and the manganese is oxidized to the permanganate ion MnO 4 . The MnO 4 ion is reduced to Mn 2 - by reacting with 50.0 mL of 0.0800 M  FeSO 4 solution. The excess Fe 2- ions are then oxidized to Fe 3- by 22.4 mL of 0.0100 M K 2 Cr 2 O 7 . Calculate the percent by mass of manganese in the sample.

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Interpretation Introduction

Interpretation:

The mass by percent of manganese in the sample is to be calculated with given mass, volume, and concentration.

Concept introduction:

The reactions in which one reactant gets oxidized while the other gets reduced are called oxidation-reduction reactions or redox reactions.

In an acidic solution, permanganate (VII) is reduced to the colorless +2 oxidation state of the manganese (II) ion.

The original amount of iron (II) is calculated as:

n=molofFe2+1000mLsoln

The excess iron (II) is calculated as:

m=V×molesofCr2O72-1000mlsolution×molofFe2+1molofCr2O72-

The amount of iron(II) consumed is calculated as:

mFe2+=originalamount-excessamount

The mass of manganese is calculated as:

mMn=mFe2+×molMnO4-molFe2+×1molMn1molMnO4-×massofMn1molMn

The mass percent of Mn is calculated as:

masspercent=(massofMngivenmass)×100

Answer to Problem 62AP

Solution: 6.49%

Explanation of Solution

Given information: A 0.450 g

sample of steel contains manganese as an impurity. The permanganate ion is reduced to Mn2+ by reacting with 50 ml of 0.0800 M. The excess Fe2+ ions are then oxidized to Fe3+

by 22.4 mL

of 0.0800 M K2Cr2O7 .

The balanced equation for the permanganate iron (II) reaction is represented below.

5Fe2+(aq) + MnO4(aq) + 8H+(aq) 5Fe3+(aq) + Mn2+(aq) + 4H2O(l)

Thus, one mole of permanganate is stoichiometrically equivalent to five moles of iron(II).

The original amount of iron(II) is calculated as follows.

n=molofFe2+1000mLsoln

nFe2+= (50.0mL×0.0800molFe2+1000mLsoln)=4.00×103molFe2+

The excess amount of iron (II) is determined by using the balanced equation represented below.

Cr2O2-7(aq) + 14H+(aq) + 6Fe2+(aq) 2Cr3+(aq) + 7H2O(l) + 6Fe3+(aq)

Thus, one mole of dichromate is equivalent to six moles of iron (II).

The excess iron (II) is calculated as follows:

m=V×molesofCr2O72-1000mlsolution×molofFe2+1molofCr2O72-

m= 22.4mL×0.0100molCr2O72-1000mLsoln×6molFe2+1molCr2O72-=1.34×103molFe2+

The amount of iron(II) consumed is calculated as follows:

mFe2+=originalamount-excessamount

mFe2+= (4.00×103mol)(1.34×103mol) = 2.66×103mol

The mass of manganese is calculated as follows:

mMn=mFe2+×molMnO4-molFe2+×1molMn1molMnO4-×massofMn1molMn

mMn= (2.66×103molFe2+)×(1molMnO45molFe2+)×(1molMn1molMnO4)×(54.94g Mn1molMn)=0.0292gMn

Finally, the mass by mass percent of Mn is calculated as follows:

masspercent=(massofMngivenmass)×100

Mn%=(0.0292g0.450g)×100%=6.49%

Conclusion

The mass by percent of manganese is calculated to be 6.49%.

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Chapter 23 Solutions

CHEMISTRY >CUSTOM<

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