What is the molar quantity of carbon dioxide if 0.75mol propane gas is combusted completely?

1 Answer
Oct 6, 2016

A stoichiometrically balanced equation is an absolute prerequisite.

C3H8(g)+5O2(g)3CO2(g)+4H2O(g)

Explanation:

C3H8(g)+5O2(g)3CO2(g)+4H2O(g)

Is this equation stoichiometrically balanced? That is, for every reactant particle, is there a corresponding product particle? In fact there is, and there must be. You might think this is a bit unfamiliar, but if you were receiving change from a cash purchase, you would be able to tell whether you were being short-changed immediately.

Given this, the equation unequivocally tells us that for each mole of propane, 44g of carbon reactant and 160g oxidant, 132g of CO2 gas are produced along with 72g of water. Mass of course is conserved as in every chemical reaction ever observed.

The equation as written was for 1 mole of propane. If there are 0.75mol of propane, coreactant O2, and product CO2 are scaled down proportionally. That is, we require 0.75mol×5mol dioxygen gas, and 0.75mol×3 carbon dioxide gas are evolved.

And thus CO2 evolved, = 0.75mol×3 = 2.25mol CO2 gas. What is the corresponding mass of this molar quantity? Can you follow this? If no, voice your objection, and we can go over this. The problem illustrates a fundamental issue of chemical understanding.

See here for another problem illustrating conservation of mass.