MedVision ad

tiny q (1 Viewer)

angelxtearz

Member
Joined
Jan 12, 2006
Messages
42
Location
Places where ^evil^ occurs
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
2006
this is partly my fault for not entirely studying for the prelim but
for calculations of gas volumes isnt it just (conditions x no of moles)?

and i don't really understand the effect of pressure and all the other stimuli in correlation to the use or effectiveness of a catalyst.


thankyoz
 

mitsui

мιтэuι
Joined
Aug 31, 2005
Messages
1,191
Location
somewhere
Gender
Female
HSC
2006
i dont get the Q u r on about. ><''

but isnt effect of pressure meaning diff conditions?? so it is still (condition x no. moles)

...no idea for the catalyst
 

Dreamerish*~

Love Addict - Nakashima
Joined
Jan 16, 2005
Messages
3,705
Gender
Female
HSC
2005
angelxtearz said:
this is partly my fault for not entirely studying for the prelim but
for calculations of gas volumes isnt it just (conditions x no of moles)?

and i don't really understand the effect of pressure and all the other stimuli in correlation to the use or effectiveness of a catalyst.


thankyoz
At 0°C and the pressure of 1 atmosphere, one mole of any gas will occupy a volume of 22.41 L.

At 25°C and the pressure of 1 atmosphere, one mole of any gas will occupy a volume of 24.79 L.


So yes. You just shove the number of moles into the formula. Moles x 22.41 or 24.79 = volume.

The second question depends on what equation you're talking about. For fermentation, for example, excess temperature will kill yeast - the catalyst. For the Haber process, presence of CO and sulfur will poison the catalyst.
 
P

pLuvia

Guest
Yeh what are you trying to ask?

Here's an easy way to do the calculations
 

Dreamerish*~

Love Addict - Nakashima
Joined
Jan 16, 2005
Messages
3,705
Gender
Female
HSC
2005
angelxtearz said:
those were 2 qz.

one on
-volume
-catalyst- how it is affected by different stimuli eg temp, pressure

ne1?
Dreamerish*~ said:
At 0°C and the pressure of 1 atmosphere, one mole of any gas will occupy a volume of 22.41 L.

At 25°C and the pressure of 1 atmosphere, one mole of any gas will occupy a volume of 24.79 L.


So yes. You just shove the number of moles into the formula. Moles x 22.41 or 24.79 = volume.

The second question depends on what equation you're talking about. For fermentation, for example, excess temperature will kill yeast - the catalyst. For the Haber process, presence of CO and sulfur will poison the catalyst.
Is this what you're talking about?
 

angelxtearz

Member
Joined
Jan 12, 2006
Messages
42
Location
Places where ^evil^ occurs
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
2006
do i HAF ta put a title.....

with the moles, i was thinking that for a volume of a gas it wud b no of moles x conditions. (gay lussac principle) but the answers for da 2004 papr . q 9 disagreed
well this is wht i gut.
9.C
no. of moles for 03- <O:p
0.72g/48g= 0.02 mol<O:p</O:p
no. of moles for NO-<O:p</O:p
0.66g/30g=0.02<O:p</O:p
volume of NO2(g) produced = 0.02 x 22.71<O:p</O:p
=0.45 L
and...i wuz wrong...
 
Last edited:

Dreamerish*~

Love Addict - Nakashima
Joined
Jan 16, 2005
Messages
3,705
Gender
Female
HSC
2005
angelxtearz said:
with the moles, i was thinking that for a volume of a gas it wud b no of moles x conditions. (gay lussac principle) but the answers for da 2004 papr . q 9 disagreed
well this is wht i gut.
9.Cffice:eek:ffice" /><o>:p></o>:p>
no. of moles for 03- <o>:p></o>:p>
0.72g/48g= 0.02 mol<o>:p></o>:p>
no. of moles for NO-<o>:p></o>:p>
0.66g/30g=0.02<o>:p></o>:p>
volume of NO2(g) produced = 0.02 x 22.71<o>:p></o>:p>
=0.45 L
and...i wuz wrong...
Wow...

Can you post up the question and the correct answer?
 

angelxtearz

Member
Joined
Jan 12, 2006
Messages
42
Location
Places where ^evil^ occurs
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
2006
so weird

thts so weird, y r were there all these random emoticons, i swear i didnt do it, i copied it from mi word doc...............................ScArY!
 

angelxtearz

Member
Joined
Jan 12, 2006
Messages
42
Location
Places where ^evil^ occurs
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
2006
questions

9​
Ozone reacts with nitric oxide according to the equation
NO(
g) + O3(g) NO2(g) + O2(g)
0.66 g NO(
g) was mixed with 0.72 g O3(g).
What is the maximum volume of NO
2(g) produced at 0°C and 100 kPa?
(A) 0.34 L
(B) 0.37 L
(C) 0.45 L
(D) 0.50 L

derz da qz

 

Riviet

.
Joined
Oct 11, 2005
Messages
5,593
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
N/A
angelxtearz said:
0.72g/48g= 0.02
0.66g/30g=0.02
DO NOT ROUND YOUR ANSWERS IN CHEMISTRY UNLESS ASKED TO DO SO IN THE QUESTION!!! :bomb:

By calculator, 0.72/48=0.015, which is 7.5% less than your rounded answer! This is most likely why you are ending up with the wrong answer.

Also 0.66/30=0.022, use this exact decimal in your calculation.

Try it again, you should get it right now. :)
 

Dreamerish*~

Love Addict - Nakashima
Joined
Jan 16, 2005
Messages
3,705
Gender
Female
HSC
2005
angelxtearz said:
9​
Ozone reacts with nitric oxide according to the equation
NO(
g) + O3(g) NO2(g) + O2(g)
0.66 g NO(
g) was mixed with 0.72 g O3(g).
What is the maximum volume of NO
2(g) produced at 0°C and 100 kPa?
(A) 0.34 L
(B) 0.37 L
(C) 0.45 L
(D) 0.50 L

derz da qz

NO2(g) + O3(g) NO2(g) + O2(g)

0.66 g of NO is reacted with 0.72 g of O3.

n = m/M

The molar mass of NO is 14 + 16 = 30 g, therefore we have 0.66/30 = 0.022 moles. (Note that I didn't round off)

The molar mass of O3 is 16 x 3 = 48 g, therefore we have 0.72/48 = 0.015 moles. (Note that I didn't round off here, either)

The molar ratio of NO to O3 is 1:1. We have 0.022 moles of NO but only 0.015 moles of O3, therefore NO is in excess - only 0.015 moles of it reacts.

The molar ratio of NO to NO2 is 1:1. Therefore 0.015 moles of NO2 is produced.

At the temperature of 0
°C and 100 kPa, one mole of any gas occupies 22.41 L.

0.015 x 22.41 = 0.33615

Now, round off to two decimal places: 0.34.

. : The answer is (A).

 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 1)

Top