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Chemistry

The equation for the burning of octane is:

2C8H18 + 25O2 ⟶ 16CO2 + 18H2O

(i) How many moles of carbon dioxide are produced when one mole of octane burns?

(ii) What volume at S.T.P. is occupied by the number of moles determined in (i)?

(iii) If the relative molecular mass of carbon dioxide is 44, what is the mass of carbon dioxide produced by burning two moles of octane?

(iv) What is the empirical formula of octane?

Mole Concept

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Answer

2C8H18+25O216CO2+18H2O2 Vol.25 Vol.16 Vol.18 Vol.16[12+2(16)]16[12+32]16[44]=704g\begin{matrix} 2\text{C}_8\text{H}_{18} & + &25\text{O}2 & \longrightarrow & 16\text{CO}2 & + & 18\text{H}2\text{O} \ 2\text{ Vol.}&& 25\text{ Vol.} && 16\text{ Vol.}&& 18\text{ Vol.} \ &&&&16[12 + 2(16)] \ &&&&16[12 + 32] \ &&&&16[44] = 704 \text{g} \ \end{matrix}

(i) 2 moles of octane produces 16 moles of CO2

∴ 1 mole octane produces 162\dfrac{16}{2} x 1

= 8 moles of CO2

(ii) 1 mole CO2 occupies volume = 22.4 L

As 2 moles of octane produces 8 moles of carbon dioxide which will occupy volume 22.41\dfrac{22.4}{1} x 8

= 179.2 dm3 of CO2

(iii) 1 mole CO2 has mass = 44 g

∴ 16 moles will have mass 441\dfrac{44}{1} x 16

= 704 g of CO2

(iv) Molecular formula is C8H18

∴ Ratio of C and H is 8 : 18

Simple ratio is 4 : 9

Hence, empirical formula = C4H9

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