Under standard conditions, what volume of carbon dioxide would result from the combustion of 295*g295g of "propane"propane?

2 Answers
Dec 17, 2017

"Methane"Methane is CH_4CH4; "propane"propane is C_3H_8C3H8... for propane we get....

Explanation:

We need to write a stoichiometrically balanced equation. And for combustion reactions the usually rigmarole is to (i) balance the carbons as carbon dioxide; (ii) then balance the hydrogens as water, and (iii) then balance the oxygens.

C_3H_8(g) + 5O_2(g) rarr 3CO_2(g) +4H_2O(l)+Delta

Even-numbered alkanes require a half-integral coefficient for dioxygen....

C_4H_10(g) + 13/2O_2(g) rarr 4CO_2(g) +5H_2O(l)+Delta

"Moles of propane"-=(295*g)/(44.1*g*mol^-1)=6.69*mol...

And thus, upon complete combustion, we gets 3xx6.69*molxx44.01*g*mol^-1=??*g with respect to carbon dioxide.

At STP, if the molar volume is 22.4*L*mol^-1...we get...

3xx6.69*molxx22.4*L*mol^-1~=450*L....take that environment...

Dec 17, 2017

450.55L CO_2 produced

Explanation:

!!! C_3H_8 is PROPANE, not methane

The chemical equation for the combustion of propane:
C_3H_8 + 5O_2 -> 3CO_2 + 4H_2O

Since there's an excess of oygen, propane gas is the limiting reactant. Using dimensional analysis, find how many liters of carbon dioxide are produced:

(1mol = 22.4L @ STP)

( 295g C_3H_8) * ( 1mol C_3H_8 // 44g C_3H_8)
* ( 3mol CO_2 // 1mol C_3H_8) * ( 22.4L CO_2 // 1mol CO_2) --->

450.55L CO_2 produced