Chemistry for Engineering Students
Chemistry for Engineering Students
3rd Edition
ISBN: 9781285199023
Author: Lawrence S. Brown, Tom Holme
Publisher: Cengage Learning
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Chapter 4, Problem 4.10PAE

4.10 How many moles of oxygen can be obtained by the decomposition of 7.5 mol of reactant in each of the following reactions?

  1. 2KClO 3   2KCl  +  3O 2

  • 2H 2 O 2   2H 2 +  O 2
  • 2HgO   2Hg  +  O 2
  • 2NaNO 3   2NaNO 2 +  O 2
  • KClO 4   KCl  +  2O 2
  • Expert Solution
    Check Mark
    Interpretation Introduction

    Interpretation:

    The moles of oxygen that is obtained by the decomposition of 7.5 moles of reactant in each of the following reactions have to be calculated.

    Concept Introduction:

    • The molar ratio can be used to relate:
    • The moles of product formed from certain moles of reactant.
    • The moles of reactant needed to form certain moles of a product.
    • The moles of a reactant needed to react with certain moles of a second reactant.

    Given:

    2 KClO32 KCl + 3O22 H2O22 H2O + O22 HgO2 Hg + O22 NaNO32 NaNO2 + O2KClO4KCl+ 2 O2

    (a) To determine:

    The moles of oxygen that is obtained by the decomposition of 7.5 moles of reactant 2 KClO32 KCl + 3O2.

    Answer to Problem 4.10PAE

    Solution:

    a) 11.25 moles of O2.

    Explanation of Solution

    Write the molar ratio between the KClO3andO2

    2 moles of KClO3 reacting with 3 moles of O2.

    So that, the molar ratio is:

    3 mol O22 moles KClO3

    Calculate the moles of O2 produced

    moles of O2 produced= 7.5 moles KClO3×3 moles O22 moles KClO3=11.25 moles of O2

    Conclusion

    a) 11.25 moles of O2.

    Expert Solution
    Check Mark
    Interpretation Introduction

    (b) To determine:

    The moles of oxygen that is obtained by the decomposition of 7.5 moles of reactant of 2 H2O22 H2O + O2.

    Answer to Problem 4.10PAE

    Solution:

    b) 3.75 moles of O2.

    Explanation of Solution

    Write the molar ratio between the H2O2andO2

    2 moles of H2O2 react with 1 mol of O2

    So that, the molar ratio is:

    1 mol O22 moles H2O2

    Calculate the moles of O2 produced

    moles of O2 produced= 7.5 moles H2O2×1 mol O22 moles H2O2=3.75 moles of O2

    Conclusion

    b) 3.75 moles of O2.

    Expert Solution
    Check Mark
    Interpretation Introduction

    (c) To determine:

    The moles of oxygen that is obtained by the decomposition of 7.5 moles of reactant of 2 HgO2 Hg + O2.

    Answer to Problem 4.10PAE

    Solution:

    c) 3.75 moles of O2.

    Explanation of Solution

    Write the molar ratio between the HgO andO2

    2 moles of HgO react with 1 mol of O2

    So that, the molar ratio is:

    1 mol O22 moles HgO

    2-Calculate the moles of O2 produced

    moles of O2 produced= 7.5 moles HgO×1 mol O22 moles HgO=3.75 moles of O2

    Conclusion

    c) 3.75 moles of O2.

    Expert Solution
    Check Mark
    Interpretation Introduction

    (d) To determine:

    The moles of oxygen that is obtained by the decomposition of 7.5 moles of reactant of 2 NaNO32 NaNO2 + O2.

    Answer to Problem 4.10PAE

    Solution:

    d) 3.75 moles of O2.

    Explanation of Solution

    Write the molar ratio between the NaNO3 andO2

    2 moles of NaNO3 react with 1 mol of O2

    So that, the molar ratio is:

    1 mol O22 moles NaNO3

    Calculate the moles of O2 produced

    moles of O2 produced= 7.5 moles NaNO3×1 mol O22 moles NaNO3=3.75 moles of O2

    Conclusion

    d) 3.75 moles of O2.

    Expert Solution
    Check Mark
    Interpretation Introduction

    (e) To determine:

    The moles of oxygen that is obtained by the decomposition of 7.5 moles of reactant of KClO4KCl+ 2 O2.

    Answer to Problem 4.10PAE

    Solution:

    e) 15 moles of O2.

    Explanation of Solution

    Write the molar ratio between the KClO4 andO2

    1 mol of KClO4 react with 2 moles of O2

    So that, the molar ratio is:

    2 moles O21 moles KClO4

    Calculate the moles of O2 produced

    moles of O2 produced= 7.5 moles KClO4×2 moles O21 moles KClO4=15 moles of O2

    Conclusion

    e) 15 moles of O2.

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    Chapter 4 Solutions

    Chemistry for Engineering Students

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