How do we represent the oxidation of a #25*g# mass aluminum metal to alumina?
2 Answers
Well, we need a stoichiometric equation....
Explanation:
And so we interpolate the equivalent masses of aluminum and dioxygen....
...and this molar quantity of metal requires...
47.309 grams
Explanation:
We need to write a balanced equation for this reaction.
Aluminium and aluminium oxide are in a 2:1 ratio.
You need to calculate the number of moles of aluminum in the 25g.
To do this you use the equation:
no. of moles (mol) = mass (g) / molecular weight (g/mol)
MW Al = 26.981 g/mol
no. of moles = 25 / 26.981
no. of moles = 0.927 mol (3 decimal places)
As there is a 2:1 ratio you must divide the number of moles by 2 as for every 2 moles of aluminium you produce 1 mole of aluminum oxide.
no. of moles of
no. of moles of
To convert back to mass we use the same equation as before, but rearranged for mass.
mass = no. of moles X molecular weight
MW
mass
mass