Using the following unbalanced equation, answer the following questions? "CaCO"_3(s) + "C"("gr") stackrel(Delta" ")(->) "CaC"_2(s) + "CO"_2(g)

2.) Using the following unbalanced equation, answer the following questions:

"CaCO"_3(s) + "C"("gr") stackrel(Delta" ")(->) "CaC"_2(s) + "CO"_2(g)

a.) Balance the reaction.

b.) How many moles of carbon required to produce 5 moles of carbon dioxide?

c.) How many moles of calcium carbide are produced if 4 moles of carbon react with excess calcium carbonate?

d.) How many moles of carbon dioxide are formed if 55 g of calcium carbonate react with excess carbon?

e.) How many grams of carbon are needed to react with 453 grams of calcium carbonate?

1 Answer
Mar 18, 2018

I will intentionally use a method that makes you think about extensive and intensive properties...


The unbalanced reaction was:

"CaCO"_3(s) + "C"("gr") stackrel(Delta" ")(->) "CaC"_2(s) + "CO"_2(g)

a) Balance the reaction. I chose calcium first:

color(red)(2)"CaCO"_3(s) + "C"("gr") stackrel(Delta" ")(->) color(red)(2)"CaC"_2(s) + "CO"_2(g)

Then I chose oxygen:

color(red)(2)"CaCO"_3(s) + "C"("gr") stackrel(Delta" ")(->) color(red)(2)"CaC"_2(s) + color(red)(3)"CO"_2(g)

Then I chose carbon at the end since "C" is easy to balance when a single atom is on one side to use.

color(blue)(color(red)(2)"CaCO"_3(s) + color(red)(5)"C"("gr") stackrel(Delta" ")(->) color(red)(2)"CaC"_2(s) + color(red)(3)"CO"_2(g))

b) Making "5.0 mols" "CO"_2 requires bb(5/3) times as many mols of "CO"_2 as was stated in the reaction (3).

Therefore, since "3 mols" "CO"_2 requires "5 mols C",

5/3 xx "3 mols CO"_2 = "5 mols CO"_2 requires

5/3 xx "5 mols C" = color(blue)(25/3 "mols") "C" atom.

c) We are told that "CaCO"_3 is in excess, so clearly, "C" is the limiting reactant. Therefore, since "5 mols C" form "2 mols CaC"_2, we scale the reaction down to get:

4/5 xx (color(red)(2)"CaCO"_3(s) + color(red)(5)"C"("gr") stackrel(Delta" ")(->) color(red)(2)"CaC"_2(s) + color(red)(3)"CO"_2(g))

Now we read directly from the re-scaled balanced reaction that:

=> 4/5 xx "5 mols C" forms 4/5 xx 2 = color(blue)(8/5 "mols CaC"_2).

d) Here we are told that "C" is in excess, so "CaCO"_3 is the limiting reactant. We have:

55 cancel("g CaCO"_3) xx ("1 mol CaCO"_3)/(40.08 + 12.011 + 3 cdot15.999 cancel("g CaCO"_3)) = "0.5495 mols CaCO"_3

Since we have a bit more than 1/2 of a "mol" of "CaCO"_3, we should make a bit more than 3/4"mols" of "CO"_2:

0.5495/2 xx (color(red)(2)"CaCO"_3(s) + color(red)(5)"C"("gr") stackrel(Delta" ")(->) color(red)(2)"CaC"_2(s) + color(red)(3)"CO"_2(g))

Now we read directly from the re-scaled balanced reaction that:

=> 0.5495/2 xx "2 mols CaCO"_3 makes 0.5495/2 xx "3 mols CO"_2,

or color(blue)("0.82 mols CO"_2) to two sig figs.

As we said, it is indeed a bit more than 3/4 = 0.75 "mols" of "CO"_2.

e) Since "55 g CaCO"_3 was "0.5495 mols", "453 g" of it is

453/55 xx "0.5495 mols" = "4.526 mols CaCO"_3

From the mol ratio, we then get that "5 mols C":"2 mols CaCO"_3 gives:

("5 mols C")/("2 mols CaCO"_3) = ("? mols C")/("4.526 mols CaCO"_3)

=> "11.31 mols C"

And this has a mass somewhat under 12^2 = "144 g":

11.31 cancel"mols C" xx ("12.011 g C")/cancel"1 mol"

= color(blue)"136 g C" to three sig figs.