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How many grams of oxygen are required to burn 13.5 g of acetylene

User Julien Bouteloup
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Answer:

41.54 grams of oxygen are required to burn 13.5 g of acetylene

Step-by-step explanation:

The balanced reaction is:

2 C₂H₂ + 5 O₂ → 4 CO₂ + 2 H₂O

By reaction stoichiometry (that is, the relationship between the amount of reagents and products in a chemical reaction), the following amounts of moles of each compound participate in the reaction:

  • C₂H₂: 2 moles
  • O₂: 5 moles
  • CO₂: 4 moles
  • H₂O: 2 moles

Being the molar mass of the compounds:

  • C₂H₂: 26 g/mole
  • O₂: 32 g/mole
  • CO₂: 44 g/mole
  • H₂O: 18 g/mole

By reaction stoichiometry, the following mass quantities of each compound participate in the reaction:

  • C₂H₂: 2 moles* 26 g/mole= 52 grams
  • O₂: 5 moles* 32 g/mole= 160 grams
  • CO₂: 4 moles* 44 g/mole= 176 grams
  • H₂O: 2 moles* 18 g/mole= 36 grams

You can apply the following rule of three: if by stoichiometry 52 grams of acetylene react with 160 grams of oxygen, 13.5 grams of acetylene react with how much mass of oxygen?


mass of oxygen=(13.5 grams of acetylene*160 grams of oxygen)/(52 grams of acetylene)

mass of oxygen= 41.54 grams

41.54 grams of oxygen are required to burn 13.5 g of acetylene

User Alkalinity
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