50,193 views
38 votes
38 votes
Liquid octane CH3CH26CH3 will react with gaseous oxygen O2 to produce gaseous carbon dioxide CO2 and gaseous water H2O. Suppose 58. g of octane is mixed with 133. g of oxygen. Calculate the minimum mass of octane that could be left over by the chemical reaction. Be sure your answer has the correct number of significant digits.

User Jilco Tigchelaar
by
2.8k points

1 Answer

29 votes
29 votes

2C6H14 + 19O2 ===> 12CO2 + 14H2O ... balanced equation

moled hexane present = 2.6 g x 1 mole/130 g = 0.02 moles

moles O2 present = 5.29 g x 1 mole/32 g = 0.165 moles

Which reactant is limiting? Hexane = 0.02/2 = 0.01; O2 = 0.165/19 = 0.0087

Thus O2 is limiting...

moles of H2O that can be produced =0.165 moles O2 x 14 H2O/19 CO2 = 0.122 moles H2O

Mass H2O = 0.122 moles x 18 gm/mole = 2.20 g (to 3 sig. figs.)

User Tavish Aggarwal
by
3.0k points