(a)
Interpretation:
The state of the reaction at the end of two-hour period is to be stated. Also, the percent decomposition of dimethyl ether is to be determined if the reaction has not proceeded to completion.
Concept introduction:
A flowchart is the complete representation of a process through boxes or other shapes which represents process units and arrows that represents the input and output of the process. The flowchart must be fully labelled to infer important data about the process involved.
Equation of states for an ideal gas is:
Here,
Stoichiometry is the calculation of the reactants and the products involved in aa chemical reaction. It is based on the law of mass conservation. According to the stoichiometry, total mass of the reactants equals the total mass of the products.
(b)
Interpretation:
The input-output enthalpy table is to be prepared and filled using elemental species as reference.
Concept introduction:
Specific heat capacity
Specific enthalpy
Here,
(c)
Interpretation:
The values of
Concept introduction:
The energy balance equation to be used is:
The formula to calculate the extent of reaction,
Here,
The formula to calculate heat of the reaction is:
The formula to calculate the internal energy of the reaction is:
(d)
Interpretation:
The amount heat transferred to or from the reactor during the two hours of the reaction is to be calculated.
Concept introduction:
The formula to calculate the value of
(e)
Interpretation:
The final volume of the reactor and the required amount of heat transfer are to be calculated is the reactor used is expandable. Also, the reason for the difference in the values of calculated
Concept introduction:
Equation of states for an ideal gas is:
Here,
For the system at constant pressure but variable volume, the mount of heat transfer is calculated as:
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionChapter 9 Solutions
ELEMENTARY PRINCIPLES OF CHEM. PROCESS.
- The following series of reactions were carried out. PbCO3(s) +2HNO3(aq) ---> Pb(NO3)2(aq) +H2O(l)+CO2(g) Pb(NO3)2(aq) + 2HCl(aq) ---> 2HNO3(aq) +PbCl(s) (a) if a student startes with 2.871 g of lead(II) carbonate for the first reaction and all other reagents are in excess, what is the theoretical yield of lead(II) chloride solid? (b) If the student isolates 2.385 g of lead(II) chloride, what is the percent yield. (please indicate which are the final answers, thank you.)arrow_forwardThe plot below shows the concentration of reactant A during a chemical reaction (A (ag) + B(ag) C (aq) + D (aq)) as a function of time. This reaction is taking place at 310 K A and B are aqueous solutes Estimate the instantaneous rate at 80 seconds. Give your answer with units of M/s. 0.50 (A) (M) 0.45 0.40 0.35 0.30 0.25 0.20 0.15 0.10 005 0.00 0 20 Type your answer. 40 60 time (s) 80 100 120 140arrow_forwardOn a time crunch! Thank you in advance!!arrow_forward
- GMT-7) Example Application of an Energy Balance to a Closed, Unsteady-State System without Reaction Alkaloids are chemical compounds containing nitrogen that can be produced by plant cells. In an experiment, an insulated closed vessel 1.673 m in volume was injected with a dilute water solution containing two alkaloids: ajmalicine and serpentine. The temperature of the solution was 10 C. To obtain an essentially dry residue of alkaloids, all of the water in the vessel was vaporized. Assume that the properties of water can be used in lieu of the properties of the solution. How much heat had to be transferred to the vessel if 1 kg of saturated liquid water initially at 10 C was completely vaporized to a final condition of 100°C and 1 atm T 100°C final H20 Figure E22.1arrow_forwardWhat is the mass-action expression, Qc, for the following chemical reaction? 4H30*(aq) + 2CI"(aq) + MnO2(s) Mn2+(aq) + 6H2O() + Cl2(g) ABBREVIATIONS AND SYMBOLS RFaraday constant A free energy atm frequency ugas constant NA gram "Chour e joule C kelvin dkilo prefix E liter Emeasure of pressure mm Hg vapor pressure Hmilli prefix S molal Kmolar CONSTANTS amount of substance ampere atmosphere atomic mass unit Avogadro constant Celsius temperature centi- prefix coulomb density electromotive force energy of activation enthalpy F molar mass mole Planck's constant M mol R-8.314 J motK R-0.08314 L bar mol K pressure rate constant reaction quotient second K speed of light k temperature, K time F-96,500 C mol F=96,500 J V'mol NA-6.022 x 102 mol h-6.626 x 10 MJS e-2.998 x 10 ms VP 0°C-273.15 K volt V I atm -1.013 bar - 760 mm Hg Specific heat capacity of H;0- 4.184 Jg'K m - volume M entropy equilibrium constant 1 PERIODIC TABLE OF THE ELEMENTS 18 1A 1 H 8A 2 13 14 4A 15 16 17 Не 1.008 ЗА 4.003 7A…arrow_forwardThe following reaction is carried out under standard conditions (25°C and 1 bar): 2CH3OH(1) + 302(g) → 2CO2(g) + 4H₂O(1) AH₁° kJ mol-1 Sᵒ J K-¹ mol-1 C6H12O6 (1) -238.4 212.0 O₂ (g) 0.0 205.1 CO₂(g) -393.5 213.7 H₂O (1) -285.8 69.95 Using the data in the table above: a) Calculate the enthalpy of reaction, ArH, for the reaction: kJ mol-¹ b) Calculate the entropy change, AS, for the reaction: 1 c) Calculate AG for the reaction: kJ mol-¹ d) Is the reaction spontaneous? Put any calculations in here: J mol-1arrow_forward
- At T=480.4 °C, when an excess copper (Cu) metal is put into 1.5 M HCl solution, hydrogen gas and CuCl2(s) are expected to be produced in the 10 L reactor. The chemical reaction equation is Cu(:) + 2НС{(аg) — СиCl2(:) + Н2 (9) Please use the following table to calculate the equilibrium partial pressure (bar) of H2 in the reactor at T=480.4 °C. Please write the unit of the pressure in bar! Thermodynamic Data at 25° C. Assume that AH; and S° are independent of temperature. AH:(kJ - mol AG;(kJ - mol-1 Cu(s) HCI (aq) -92.3 -95.27 H2 (g) CuCl2 (s) -220.1 -175.7arrow_forward2 When 50 cm' of hydrochloric acid of concentration 2.0 mol dm is added to 50 cm' of sodium hydroxide solution of concentration 2.0mol dm, the temperature increase is 13.0°C HCl(aq) + NAOH(aq) + NaCl(aq) + H,O(1) The experiment is repeated using 25 cm of the same hydrochloric acid and 50 cm' of the same sodium hydroxide solution. What is the temperature increase? O A 4.9°C I B 6.5°C I C 8.7°C D 13.0°Carrow_forward3. Two moles of an equimolar mixture of CO and H₂O (i.e., one mole of carbon monoxide and one mole of water vapor) is placed in an experimental reactor in which the water- gas shift reaction: CO(g) + H₂O(g) → CO₂(g) + H₂(g) occurs at 2 Atm and at a temperature at which 4G rxn= -0.6932RT. Determine the equilibrium composition (mole fractions) in the reactor.arrow_forward
- The temperature of a reaction was monitored with an thermometer that is reported to have precision of 0.2 K (uniform distribution). If we used this thermometer to monitor the temperature change in a particular exothermic reaction, what is expanded uncertainty (use coverage factor k = 2) in the net temperature change for the following measurements: Temperature before reaction starts = 296.2 K Temperature after reaction is finished = 305.6 K Net temperature change = 9.4 K. Expanded uncertainty at the 95% confidence interval level (k = 2) = ? (include unit!) Answer: 0.3Karrow_forwardA vehicle airbag system works by using a series of chemical reactions. When sensors in the system detect a collision, a heat source instantly causes the decomposition of sodium azide at 300oC. This first reaction produces sodium metal and nitrogen gas. The formation of the nitrogen gas inflates the airbag, but unfortunately, the other product, sodium metal, is extremely dangerous and highly reactive. The sodium metal must undergo an immediate secondary reaction to transform into a safer substance. That’s where potassium nitrate gets involved. In the secondary reaction, sodium metal reacts with the potassium nitrate to form potassium oxide, sodium oxide, and additional nitrogen gas. This secondary generation of nitrogen gas also fills the airbag. Excess gas from the secondary reaction gets vented from e airbag. Finally, in the third and fourth reactions, the sodium oxide and potassium oxide react with silicon dioxide separately to product harmless and stable silicate glasses sodium…arrow_forwardPlease show all the steps to these all solution. Thanks in advancearrow_forward
- ChemistryChemistryISBN:9781305957404Author:Steven S. Zumdahl, Susan A. Zumdahl, Donald J. DeCostePublisher:Cengage LearningChemistryChemistryISBN:9781259911156Author:Raymond Chang Dr., Jason Overby ProfessorPublisher:McGraw-Hill EducationPrinciples of Instrumental AnalysisChemistryISBN:9781305577213Author:Douglas A. Skoog, F. James Holler, Stanley R. CrouchPublisher:Cengage Learning
- Organic ChemistryChemistryISBN:9780078021558Author:Janice Gorzynski Smith Dr.Publisher:McGraw-Hill EducationChemistry: Principles and ReactionsChemistryISBN:9781305079373Author:William L. Masterton, Cecile N. HurleyPublisher:Cengage LearningElementary Principles of Chemical Processes, Bind...ChemistryISBN:9781118431221Author:Richard M. Felder, Ronald W. Rousseau, Lisa G. BullardPublisher:WILEY