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Topic: total pressure of a mixture  (Read 3192 times)

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Offline samiam991

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total pressure of a mixture
« on: May 11, 2012, 03:34:29 PM »
Hi I need help understanding this solution.
10g H2 and 54 g of o2 are contained in a 10 L flask at 200 degrees Celsius.
Upon sparking what is the final pressure of the container.
a equation
2H2 + 02  -->2H20
5 mol   2 mol
we know H20 is in vapor form.
solution shows  H2 is excess, O2 is limiting reagent.

I am confused as to why 4 mol of H20 and 1 mol of H2 is used to calculate pressure
P=n(total)RT/V

thanks!

Offline fledarmus

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Re: total pressure of a mixture
« Reply #1 on: May 11, 2012, 04:59:57 PM »
If all of your oxygen reacts with as much hydrogen as it can, how much hydrogen is left over? How much water is formed? How much oxygen is left over?

Offline Borek

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Re: total pressure of a mixture
« Reply #2 on: May 11, 2012, 05:06:53 PM »
I am confused as to why 4 mol of H20 and 1 mol of H2 is used to calculate pressure

Where did you get these numbers from? They are incorrect.
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Offline fledarmus

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Re: total pressure of a mixture
« Reply #3 on: May 12, 2012, 11:08:44 AM »
I am confused as to why 4 mol of H20 and 1 mol of H2 is used to calculate pressure

Where did you get these numbers from? They are incorrect.

Oops - based on the original post, I just assumed "54 g of O2" was a typo and should have read "64 g of O2" - samiam991, was that the case?

Offline samiam991

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Re: total pressure of a mixture
« Reply #4 on: May 12, 2012, 02:31:19 PM »
Yep you are correct it was a typo on my part.
And I understand that this was a question based on ratio.
because oxygen to water is 1:2
2 mol of oxygen used up means 4 mols of h20 are produced.
and the ratio of h2 to o2 is 2:1
so 4 mols of H2 is used up for 2 mols of oxygen used,leaving 1 mol of H2 left.

I am confused as to why 4 mol of H20 and 1 mol of H2 is used to calculate pressure

Where did you get these numbers from? They are incorrect.

Oops - based on the original post, I just assumed "54 g of O2" was a typo and should have read "64 g of O2" - samiam991, was that the case?

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