Question #a23d4

1 Answer
Mar 21, 2015

You have #"3.35 g"# of carbon combined with that many atoms of hydrogen in hexane.

Start by determining the percent composition of carbon and hydrogen in hexane. This can be done by using the molar masses of carbon, hydrogen, and hexane.

Essentially, you will determine the percentage carbon and hydrogen each hold in hexane by dividing each element's contribution, i.e. their molar masses multiplied by their respective number of atoms, by the molar mass of hexane, then multiplying by 100

#"For C: " (6 * "12.011 g/mol")/("86.178 g/mol") * 100 = "83.62%"#

#"For H: " (14 * "1.00794 g/mol")/("86.178 g/mol") * 100 = "16.38%"#

This means that every 100 g of hexane contains 83.62 g of carbon and 16.38 g of hydrogen.

Next, you need to figure out exactly how much hydrogen you have - use Avogadro's number to go from atoms to moles and hydrogen's molar mass to go from moles to grams

#3.92 * 10^(23)cancel("atoms") * (cancel("1 mole H"))/(6.022 * 10^(23)cancel("atoms")) * "1.00794 g"/(cancel("1 mole H")) = "0.656 g H"#

This means that you'll get

#"0.656"cancel("g H") * "83.62 g C"/("16.38"cancel("g H")) = color(red)("3.35 g C")#

#color(green)("!! ALTERNATIVE METHOD !!")#

You can determine the mass you're interested in without actually calculating percent composition; here's how you'd do that.

Determine the number of moles of hydrogen you get

#3.92 * cancel(10^(23))cancel("atoms") * "1 mole H"/(6.022 * cancel(10^(23))cancel("atoms")) = "0.6510 moles H"#

Since 1 molecule of hexane needs 6 carbon atoms and 14 hydrogen atoms, 1 mole of hexane will need 6 moles of carbon and 14 moles of hydrogen.

Therefore,

#"0.6510"cancel("moles H") * "6 moles C"/("14"cancel("moles H")) = "0.279 moles C"#

Use carbon's molar mass to go from moles to grams

#"0.279"cancel("moles C") * "12.011 g"/("1"cancel("mol of C")) = color(red)("3.35 g C")#