116k views
4 votes
2C₂H6 + 702 —>4C02 + 6H₂O

If you used 4.88x10^25 molecules of C2H6 to start a
fire, how many molecules of CO2 did you Create?

1 Answer

2 votes

Answer:

975.56×10²³ molecules

Step-by-step explanation:

Given data:

Number of molecules of C₂H₆ = 4.88×10²⁵

Number of molecules of CO₂ produced = ?

Solution:

Chemical equation:

2C₂H₆ + 7O₂ → 4CO₂ + 6H₂O

Number of moles of C₂H₆:

1 mole = 6.022×10²³ molecules

4.88×10²⁵ molecules×1mol/6.022×10²³ molecules

0.81×10² mol

81 mol

Now we will compare the moles of C₂H₆ with CO₂.

C₂H₆ : CO₂

2 : 4

81 : 4/2×81 = 162 mol

Number of molecules of CO₂:

1 mole = 6.022×10²³ molecules

162 mol ×6.022×10²³ molecules / 1 mol

975.56×10²³ molecules

User RPT
by
5.1k points