asked 26.5k views
1 vote
‼️I have balanced the EQ already, but I'm lost on part B. will be awarding all my points (100+) to someone who can help and provide steps :) ‼️

Mrs. Webb placed a cup containing 10.0 g of water into a beaker, then placed 2.0 g of calcium carbide, CaC₂ into the H₂O. The reaction produced flammable ethyne (C₂H₂) gas an calcium hydroxide.
a. Write the balanced equation for the reaction. CaC₂+ H₂O → C₂ H₂ + Ca(OH)₂
b. How many L of ethyne (at STP) can form?​

asked
User Srcerer
by
9.0k points

1 Answer

1 vote

Step-by-step explanation:

To determine how many liters of ethyne (C₂H₂) can form at STP, we need to use stoichiometry and the ideal gas law.

First, let's determine the number of moles of CaC₂ and H₂O that reacted. From the given information, we know that the mass of water is 10.0 g and the mass of CaC₂ is 2.0 g. We can use the molar masses of CaC₂ (64.10 g/mol) and H₂O (18.02 g/mol) to convert the masses to moles:

moles of CaC₂ = 2.0 g / 64.10 g/mol = 0.0312 mol

moles of H₂O = 10.0 g / 18.02 g/mol = 0.555 mol

Next, we need to determine the limiting reactant to find out how many moles of ethyne can form. To do this, we compare the mole ratio of CaC₂ to H₂O in the balanced equation:

CaC₂ + 2H₂O → C₂H₂ + Ca(OH)₂

1 2

For every 1 mole of CaC₂, we need 2 moles of H₂O to react. The moles of H₂O we have (0.555 mol) are more than enough to react with the moles of CaC₂ we have (0.0312 mol). Therefore, CaC₂ is the limiting reactant.

Now we can use the mole ratio of CaC₂ to C₂H₂ in the balanced equation to find the moles of C₂H₂ that can form:

CaC₂ + 2H₂O → C₂H₂ + Ca(OH)₂

1 1

1 mole of CaC₂ produces 1 mole of C₂H₂. Therefore, the moles of C₂H₂ that can form is also 0.0312 mol.

Finally, we can use the ideal gas law to find the volume of C₂H₂ at STP. The ideal gas law is PV = nRT, where P is the pressure, V is the volume, n is the number of moles, R is the gas constant, and T is the temperature. At STP, the pressure is 1 atm and the temperature is 273 K.

Plugging in the values, we get:

V = (nRT) / P

V = (0.0312 mol)(0.0821 L·atm/mol·K)(273 K) / 1 atm

V = 0.738 L

Therefore, the volume of C₂H₂ that can form at STP is 0.738 L.

answered
User Apmccartney
by
7.6k points

Related questions

asked May 28, 2019 205k views
Lasneyx asked May 28, 2019
by Lasneyx
7.7k points
1 answer
2 votes
205k views
asked Feb 13, 2020 70.7k views
Tim Pierce asked Feb 13, 2020
by Tim Pierce
8.1k points
2 answers
2 votes
70.7k views
Welcome to Qamnty — a place to ask, share, and grow together. Join our community and get real answers from real people.