In the cocaine formula for every N (14 g/mole) atom here are 17 C (12g) atoms and 2 H (1g) atoms
Therefore thee ratios of masses of those three elements must be:
N -- 14
C --17*12 = 204
H --2*1 =2
Now how many moles of C in 150 g CO2?
(I am going to use grams instead of milligrams for everything because we are only interested in ratios in the end)
mole of CO2 = 12 +32 = 44 g/mole
so we have 150/44 = 3.41 moles CO2
and therefore 3.41 moles of C
which is 3.41 * 12 = 40.9 grams of C
Now how many moles of H in 46.05 g of H2O?
mole of H2O = 2+16 = 18 g/mole
so we have 46.05/8 = 2.56 moles H2O
and thus 2*2.56 = 5.12 moles of H
Now check ratios of either moles or grams
moles C/moles H = 3.41/5.12 = .666
but we know that we need 17 moles C to every 2 moles H if it is cocaine!
check my arithmetic and do more similar analysis for Nitrogen as well
A confiscated white substance, suspected of being cocaine, was purified by a forensic chemist and subjected to elemental analysis. Combustion of a 50.86-mg sample yielded 150.0 mg CO2 and 46.05 mg H2O. Analysis for nitrogen showed that the compound contained 9.39% N by mass. The formula of cocaine is C17H21NO4. Can the forensic chemist conclude that the suspected compound is cocaine?
3 answers
46/18 not 46/8
The calculation is right above but I typed 8 instead of 18
The calculation is right above but I typed 8 instead of 18
It says 21 moles of Hydrogen , not 2 !