Answer:
Explanation:
We want the energy required for the transition:
CO 2
(
s
)
+
Δ
→
C
O
2
(
g
)
Explanation:
We assume that the temperature of the gas and the solid are EQUAL.
And thus we simply have to work out the product:
2
×
10^
3
⋅
g
×
196.3
⋅
J
⋅
g
−
1 to get an answer in Joules as required.
What would be the energy change for the reverse transition:
C
O
2
(
g
)
+
→
C
O
2
(
s
)
?
Ten name if this compound is Potassium Oxide
The equation that relates both energy and wavelength is:
where e is the energy and lambda is the wavelength.
Therefore, as we can see from this equation, the energy of an electromagnetic wave is inversely related to the wavelength of the electromagnetic wave.
A general equation for a combustion reaction would be expressed as follows:
CxHy + (x+y/2)O2 = xCO2 + y/2H2O
Propane would obviously would only have carbon and hydrogen in its structure. Assuming a complete combustion, all of the carbon atoms would go to carbon dioxide and all of the hydrogen atoms to water. To determine the empirical, we determine the number of carbon and hydrogen atoms present.
moles C = 2.461 g CO2 ( 1 mol / 44.01 g ) ( 1 mol C / 1 mol CO2 ) = 0.06 mol C
moles H = 1.442 g H2O ( 1 mol / 18.02 g ) ( 2 mol H / 1 mol H ) = 0.16 mol H
Then, we divide the smallest amount to the each mole of the atoms. We do as follows:
C = 0.06 / 0.06 = 1
H = 0.16 / 0.06 = 2.67
Then we multiply a number in order to obtain a whole number ratio between the atoms.
1 CH2.67
2 C2H5.34
3 C3H8 <-------- empirical formula