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8 July, 17:31

When a mixture of 12.0 g of acetylene (c2h2 and 12.0 g of oxygen (o2 is ignited, the resultant combustion reaction produces co2 and h2o?

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  1. 8 July, 20:54
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    The product of the complete combustion of any fuel (in this case, acetylene) are indeed water and carbon dioxide.

    Balancing the combustion reaction,

    C2H2 + (5/2) O2 - - > 2CO2 + H2O

    The number of moles of C2H2 will be,

    (12 g) x (1 mole/26 g) = 6/13 mole

    Then, the number of moles of O2 is,

    (12 g) x (1 mole/32 g) = 3/8 mole

    Therefore the limiting reaction is the O2. Getting the amount of CO2 and H2O produced from balancing,

    CO2 = (3/8 moles) x (2 moles CO2 / 5/2 mole O2) (44 g / 1 mole) = 52.8 g

    H2O = (3/8 moles) x (1 mole / 5/2 mole O2) (18 g / 1 mole) = 2.7 g
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