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For the following reaction, 5.20 grams of propane (C3H8) are allowed to react with 22.5 grams of oxygen gas. propane (C3H8) (g) oxygen (g) carbon dioxide (g) water (g) What is the maximum amount of carbon dioxide that can be formed

User Satumba
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Answer:

15.58g of CO₂ is the maximum amount that can be produced

Step-by-step explanation:

The propane reacts with oxygen as follows:

C₃H₈ + 5O₂ → 3CO₂ + 4H₂O

Where 1 mole of propane reacts with 5 moles of oxygen

To solve this question we need to find the moles of propane and oxygen to find limiting reactant using the chemical reaction:

Moles propane -Molar mass: 44.1g/mol-:

5.20g * (1mol / 44.1g) = 0.118 moles

Moles oxygen -Molar mass: 32g/mol-:

22.5g O₂ * (1mol / 32g) = 0.703 moles

For a complete reaction of 0.703 moles of oxygen are:

0.703 moles O₂ * (1mol C₃H₈ / 5mol O₂) = 0.141 moles of propane are necessaries. As there are just 0.118 moles of propane, propane is limiting reactant.

The moles of carbon dioxide that are produced are:

0.118 moles C₃H₈ * (3 moles CO₂ / 1 mol C₃H₈) = 0.354 moles CO₂

The maximum mass that can be produced is -Molar mass CO₂: 44.01g/mol-:

0.354 moles CO₂ * (44.01g / mol) =

15.58g of CO₂ is the maximum amount that can be produced

User Esteban Araya
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