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Potassium chlorate, KClO3, decomposes when heated to produce potassium chloride and oxygen gas. If 2.50 grams of KCLO3 were heated in a test tube, how many grams of oxygen gas should be given off?

User Friday
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2 Answers

7 votes
Potassium chlorate has a molas mass of 122.55 g/mol. So, 2.50 g of KClO3 is,
2.5 g / (122.55 g/mol) = 0.0204 moles KClO3

The balanced chemical reaction is this:
2KClO3 ----> 2KCl + 3O2

So, for every 2 moles of KClO3, 3 moles of O2 forms. Using this ratio,
0.0204 moles KClO3 (3/2) = 0.0306 moles O2.

Converting moles of O2 to grams of O2:
0.0306 moles (16 g/mol) = 0.4896 grams

Therefore, around 0.49 grams of O2 will be formed if 2.50 g of KClO3 decomposed.

User Zory
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8.6k points
1 vote

Answer:

0.98 g
O_(2)

Step-by-step explanation:


  • O_(2) = 2.5 g KCLO3 x
    (1 mol KCLO3)/(122.5 g KCLO3) * (3 mol O2)/(2 mol KCLO3) * (32 g O2)/(1 mol O2) = 0.98 g O2
User Chris Culter
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8.4k points