Chemistry
Chemistry
13th Edition
ISBN: 9781259911156
Author: Raymond Chang Dr., Jason Overby Professor
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Education
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Chapter 24, Problem 24.54QP

The combustion of 3.795 mg of liquid B, which contains only C, H, and O, with excess oxygen gave 9.708 mg of CO2 and 3.969 mg of H2O. In a molar mass determination, 0.205 g of B vaporized at 1.00 atm and 200.0°C and occupied a volume of 89.8 mL. Derive the empirical formula, molar mass, and molecular formula of B and draw three plausible structures.

Expert Solution & Answer
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Interpretation Introduction

Interpretation:

Empirical formula, molar mass and molecular formula of B have to be derived; three plausible structures have to be drawn.

Concept introduction:

Steps to calculate empirical formula:

  • Convert the mass of elements into moles.
  • Divide each mole value by the smallest number of moles calculated.
  • Round to the nearest whole number.

Number of moles = Molarity × volume

Number of moles=MassMolarmass

Explanation of Solution

Calculate moles of each given elements:

C:(9.708×10-3gCO2)1molCO244.01 gCO2×1molC1molCO2=2.206×10-4molC

H:(3.969×10-3gH2O)1molH2O18.02 gH2O×2molH1molH2O=4.405×10-4molH

The mass of oxygen is found by difference:

Convert moles of carbon into mass in mg: Mass=(2.206×10-4molC)(12g/mol)=2.647mg

Convert moles of hydrogen into mass in mg: Mass=(4.405×10-4molH)(1g/mol)=0.44mg

3.795mgcompound-(2.649mgC+0.440mgH)=0.706mgO

O:(0.706×10-3gO)×1molO16.00gO=4.41×10-5molO

This gives the formula C2.206×10-4H4.405×10-4O4.41×10-5. Dividing the smallest number of moles gives the empirical formula, C5H10O

Now, let’s calculate moles using the ideal gas equation, and then calculate the molar mass.

n=PVRT=(1.00atm)(0.0898L)(0.0821L.atm/K.mol)(473K)=0.00231mol

Molar mass = gofsubstancemolofsubstance=0.205g0.00231mol=88.7g/mol

The formula mass of C5H10O is 86.13g, so is the molecular formula. Three possible structures are,

Chemistry, Chapter 24, Problem 24.54QP

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Chapter 24 Solutions

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