World of Chemistry, 3rd edition
World of Chemistry, 3rd edition
3rd Edition
ISBN: 9781133109655
Author: Steven S. Zumdahl, Susan L. Zumdahl, Donald J. DeCoste
Publisher: Brooks / Cole / Cengage Learning
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Chapter 7, Problem 47A
Interpretation Introduction

Interpretation:

A balanced chemical equation corresponding to the decomposition of potassium chlorate into potassium chloride and oxygen needs to be presented.

Concept Introduction:

  • A chemical reaction is expressed as a chemical equation having reactants and products on left and right side of the reaction arrow respectively.
  •   Reactants  Products

  • A balanced chemical equation is one in which the number of atoms of various elements on the reactants side is equal to that on the product side. It depicts the stoichiometry of a given reaction.
  • The equations are balanced in two steps:
  • 1) Balance the atoms by matching the number of atoms of each type on the reactants and product side.

    2) Adjust the coefficients to the smallest whole number. A coefficient of '1' is implied and therefore not explicitly written.

Expert Solution & Answer
Check Mark

Answer to Problem 47A

  2KClO3(s)heat 2KCl (s) + 3O2(g)  

Explanation of Solution

The given equation involves the thermal decomposition of solid potassium chlorate to form solid potassium chloride and oxygen gas. The reactants and products are:

Reactant:

  Potassium chlorate, solid - KClO3(s)

Products:

  Oxygen, gas - O2 (g)Potassium chloride, solid - KCl (s)

Unbalanced equation:

  KClO3(s)heatKCl (s) + O2(g)  

The above equation is not balanced since the number of O atoms is 3 on the reactants side and 2 on the products. In order to balance the above equation, multiply both KClO3 and KCl by 2 and O2 by 3 to get:

  2KClO3(s)heat 2KCl (s) + 3O2(g)  

Conclusion

Therefore, 2 moles of potassium chlorate decomposes to form 2 moles of potassium chloride and 3 moles of oxygen gas.

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