Asked by PawToo
Used the following equation to answer the question below : 5C(s)+2SO2(g)=CS2(I)+4CO(q)
A-) how many moles of carbon needed to produce 13g of CS2.
B-) how many grams of SO2 are necessary to react with 3.45g of carbon.
C-) how many liters of CO (at STP) re produced from 2.45 mole of SO2?
A-) how many moles of carbon needed to produce 13g of CS2.
B-) how many grams of SO2 are necessary to react with 3.45g of carbon.
C-) how many liters of CO (at STP) re produced from 2.45 mole of SO2?
Answers
Answered by
Steve
how many moles in 13g of CS2?
The equation tells you that it takes 5 times that many moles of C.
same for SO2. Figure the moles of C, then take 2/5 that many of SO2. Then go back to grams.
Again, figure the moles, and recall that one mole of a gas occupies 22.4L at STP.
The equation tells you that it takes 5 times that many moles of C.
same for SO2. Figure the moles of C, then take 2/5 that many of SO2. Then go back to grams.
Again, figure the moles, and recall that one mole of a gas occupies 22.4L at STP.
There are no AI answers yet. The ability to request AI answers is coming soon!
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.