513,938 views
39 votes
39 votes
A hydrocarbon is combusted resulting in 12.57 grams of carbon dioxide and 7.72grams of water. What is the empirical formula of the hydrocarbon? (Match carbonand hydrogen to the correct number it would be within the empirical formula. Forexample, if you get C3Hg, match carbon with 3 and hydrogen with 8).

User Michael Ilyin
by
2.9k points

1 Answer

12 votes
12 votes

In order to find the empirical formula of a compound we need to use the mass given in the question and also each molar mass and go through a step by step process, but when it comes to finding empirical formula for combustion reactions, the question needs a little more of logic in order to properly answer, so let's work on each step

The question gave us:

12.57g of CO2

7.72 of H2O

We know that the combustion reaction will be:

CxHy + O2 -> CO2 + H2O (the reaction is not properly balanced, but this will not be influential in our answer)

(CxHy is because we don't know which hydrocarbon we have yet)

Following the law of conservation of mass, we know that every Carbon present in CO2 came from the hydrocarbon, as every mol of Hydrogen also came from the hydrocarbon, let's see how many moles of each one we have

Molar mass of H2O is 18g/mol and CO2 is 44g/mol

18g = 1 mol

7.72g = x moles

x = 0.43 moles of H2O present in 7.72 grams of H2O

But since we have 2 atoms of hydrogen in the compound, we actually have 0.86 moles of H and 0.43 moles of O in this water molecule

44g = 1 mol

12.57g = x moles

x = 0.28 moles of CO2 in 12.57 grams

Since we have just 1 atom of Carbon in CO2, we will have 0.28 moles of Carbon

Now we can find the empirical formula, because we know that we have 0.86 moles of Hydrogen and 0.28 moles of Carbon coming from the hydrocarbon

In order to find the empirical formula we need to divide all the values of number of moles by the lowest value, therefore:

0.86/0.28 = 3 moles of H

0.28/028 = 1 mol of C

So this compound is CH3

User Cyrus The Great
by
3.1k points