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andre [41]
3 years ago
6

The propane fuel (C3H8) used in gas barbeques burns according to a thermochemical equation. If a pork roast must absorb 1.6 * 10

3 kJ to fully cook, and if only 10% of the heat produced by the barbeque is actually absorbed by the roast, what mass of CO2 is emitted into the atmosphere during the grilling of the pork roast?
Chemistry
1 answer:
ozzi3 years ago
6 0

Answer:

1033 g

Explanation:

The amount of heat energy required to roast the pork = 10*1600 kJ = 16000 kJ.

Using the change in enthalpy of the reaction given in the question and the balanced chemical equation:

3 moles of carbon dioxide is equivalent to -2044 kJ. 1 mole of carbon dioxide is equivalent to 44 g. Thus:

The mass of carbon dioxide emitted is:

m_{CO_{2} } = 16000 kJ*\frac{3 mol }{2044 kJ}*\frac{44 g}{1 mol} =  1033 g

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URGENT A gas occupies a volume of 2.4 L at 0.14 ATM. What volume will the gas occupy at 0.84 ATM ?
alisha [4.7K]

Answer:

c 0.40 L

Explanation:

Calculate by using Boyle's Law P₁V₁=P₂V₂

(0.14atm)(2.4L) = (0.84atm)(V₂)

0.336 atmL = (0.84atm)(V₂)

V₂ = 0.336 atmL/0.84atm

V₂ = 0.4 L

6 0
3 years ago
Why does increasing the temperature make a solid dissolve faster?
Deffense [45]

Answer:

The chemical bonds of the solid are broken faster.

Explanation:

As the temperature of a solution is increased, the average kinetic energy of the molecules that make up the solution also increases. The increased vibration (kinetic energy) of the solute molecules causes them to be less able to hold together, and thus they dissolve more readily.

6 0
3 years ago
A sample of krypton gas collected at a pressure of 1.31 atm and a temperature of 26.0°C is found to occupy a volume of 23.3 lite
djyliett [7]

Mol of Kr gas = 1.244

<h3>Further explanation</h3>

In general, the gas equation can be written  

<h3> PV=nRT </h3>

where  

P = pressure, atm  

V = volume, liter  

n = number of moles  

R = gas constant = 0.08205 L.atm / mol K  

T = temperature, Kelvin  

P=1.31 atm

V=23.3 L

T=26+273=299 K

mol of sample :

\tt n=\dfrac{PV}{RT}=\dfrac{1.31\times 23.3}{0.08205\times 299}=1.244

3 0
3 years ago
The bromination of acetone is acid-catalyzed.CH3COCH3 + Br2 CH3COCH2Br + H+ + Br -The rate of disappearance of bromine was measu
Ann [662]

Answer:

a) The rate law is:

rate = k[Acetone][Br₂]⁰[H⁺] = k[Acetone][H⁺]

b) The value of k is:

k = 3.86 × 10⁻³ M⁻¹ · s⁻¹

Explanation:

Acetone (M) Br2 (M) H+ (M) Rate (M/s)

0.30                 0.050 0.050 5.7 x 10-5

0.30                   0.10 0.050 5.7 x 10-5

0.30                  0.050    0.10       1.2 x 10-4

0.40              0.050  0.20  3.1 x 10-4

0.40               0.050         0.050 7.6 x 10-5

A generic rate law for this reaction could be written as follows:

rate = k[Acetone]ᵃ[Br₂]ᵇ[H⁺]ⁿ

The rate for the reaction in trial 2 is:

rate 2 = 5.7 ×10⁻⁵M/s = k(0.3)ᵃ(0.1)ᵇ(0.050)ⁿ

For the reaction in trial 1:

rate 1 = 5.7 ×10⁻⁵M/s = k(0.3)ᵃ(0.050)ᵇ(0.050)ⁿ

If we divide both expressions, we can obtain "b": rate2 / rate1:

rate2/rate1 = k(0.3)ᵃ(0.1)ᵇ(0.050)ⁿ / k(0.3)ᵃ(0.050)ᵇ(0.050)ⁿ

1 = 2ᵇ

b = 0

If we now take the expressions from trial 3 and 1 and divide them, we can obtain "n":

rate 3/rate 1 = k(0.3)ᵃ(0.050)⁰(0.01)ⁿ/ k(0.3)ᵃ(0.050)⁰(0.050)ⁿ

2.1 = 2ⁿ  Applying ln to both side of the equation:

ln 2.1 = n ln2

ln2.1/ln2 = n

1 ≅ n

Taking now the reaction in trial 5 and 1 and dividing them:

rate 5/rate 1 = k(0.4)ᵃ(0.050)⁰(0.050) / k(0.3)ᵃ(0.050)⁰(0.050)

4/3 = 4/3ᵃ  

a = 1

a)Then the rate law can be written as follows:

rate = k[Acetone][Br₂]⁰[H⁺]

It might be suprising that the rate of bromination of acetone does not depend on the concentration of Br₂. However, looking at the reaction mechanism, you can find out why.

b) Now, we can find the constant k for every experiment and calculate its average value:

rate / [Acetone][Br₂]⁰[H⁺]  = k

For reaction 1:

k1 = 5.7 ×10⁻⁵M/s / (0.3 M)(0.050 M) = 3.8 ×10⁻³ M⁻¹ · s⁻¹

Reaction 2: k2 = 5.7 ×10⁻⁵M/s / (0.30 M)(0.050 M) = 3.8 ×10⁻³ M⁻¹ · s⁻¹

Reaction 3: k3 = 1.2 ×10⁻⁴M/s / (0.30 M)(0.10 M) = 4.0 ×10⁻³ M⁻¹ · s⁻¹

Reaction 4: k4 = 3.1 ×10⁻⁴M/s / (0.40 M)(0.20 M) = 3.9 ×10⁻³ M⁻¹ · s⁻¹

Reaction 5: k5 = 7.6 ×10⁻⁵M/s / (0.4 M)(0.05 M) = 3.8 ×10⁻³ M⁻¹ · s⁻¹

Averge value of k:

k = (k1 + k2 + k3 + k4 + k5)/5 = 3.86 × 10⁻³ M⁻¹ · s⁻¹

3 0
3 years ago
Molecular chlorine and molecular fluorine combine to form a gaseous product. Under the same conditions of temperature and pressu
uranmaximum [27]

Answer:

  • Cl F₃

Explanation:

<u>1) Reactants:</u>

The reactants are:

  • <em>Molecular chlorine</em>: this is a gas diatomic molecule, i.e. Cl₂ (g)

  • <em>Molecular fluorine</em>: this is also a gas diatomic molecule: F₂ (g)

<u>2) Stoichiometric coefficients:</u>

  • <em>One volume of Cl₂ react with three volumes of F₂</em> means that the reaction is represented with coefficients 1 for Cl₂ and 3 for F₂. So, the reactant side of the chemical equation is:

        Cl₂ (g) + 3F₂ (g) →

<u>3) Product:</u>

  • It is said that the reaction yields <em>two volumes of a gaseous product;</em> then, a mass balance indicates that the two volumes must contain 2 parts of Cl and 6 parts of F. So, one volume must contain 1 part of Cl and 3 parts of F. That is easy to see in the complete chemical equation:

       Cl₂ (g) + 3F₂ (g) → 2Cl F₃ (g)

        As you see, that last equation si balanced: 2 atoms of Cl and 6 atoms of F on each side, and you conclude that the formula of the product is ClF₃.

8 0
3 years ago
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