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How many grams of sulfur must be burned to give 100.0 g of So2

1 Answer

9 votes

Answer:

50 g of S are needed

Step-by-step explanation:

To star this, we begin from the reaction:

S(s) + O₂ (g) → SO₂ (g)

If we burn 1 mol of sulfur with 1 mol of oxygen, we can produce 1 mol of sulfur dioxide. In conclussion, ratio is 1:1.

According to stoichiometry, we can determine the moles of sulfur dioxide produced.

100 g. 1mol / 64.06g = 1.56 moles

This 1.56 moles were orginated by the same amount of S, according to stoichiometry.

Let's convert the moles to mass

1.56 mol . 32.06g / mol = 50 g

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