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Balance this combustion reaction first! 2C4H10 + 13O2 -> 8CO2 + 10H2O 0.86 moles C4H10 (13 moles O2/2 moles C4H10) = 5.6 moles of oxygen required ----------------------------------------
A. A balance chemical equation of burning of ethene is C2H4 + 3O2 ____ 2CO2 + 2H2O now according to balance chemical equation 1 mole of ethene burn by using 3 moles of oxygen so to burn 10 moles of ethene 3 x 10 30 moles of oxygen will be required.
Butane lighters burn hotter but use up fuel fast compared to regular lighter fluid lighters which do not burn as hot but do not use up fuel as fast.**The answer is found in chemistry. Butane is a specific chemical, ie. C4H10; an alkane with four carbons and ten hydrogens. Lighter fluid is not so specific in its contents - it is generally defined as a highly combustible (thus high octane) hydrocarbon; Naptha.
No!!!!!!!!Added:Don't change!!Both pressure and ideal mixture with air are totally different, so one 'propane'-specific burner can't burn butane properly.
Iron will burn in pure oxygen.
4 moles
4 moles
The answer is 3,99 moles of carbon dioxide.
The balanced equation for the reaction is 2 C4H10 + 13 O2 -> 8 CO2 + 10 H2O. This shows that 13 moles of diatomic oxygen are required to burn 2 moles of butane. By proportionality, (4.8/2)13 or 31.2 moles of oxygen are required to burn 4.8 moles of butane. This corresponds to 31.2(32) or 1.0 X 103 grams of oxygen.
The answer is 3,99 moles of carbon dioxide.
Balance this combustion reaction first! 2C4H10 + 13O2 -> 8CO2 + 10H2O 0.86 moles C4H10 (13 moles O2/2 moles C4H10) = 5.6 moles of oxygen required ----------------------------------------
8,75 moles of oxygen are needed.
16,875 moles of oxygen are needed.
A. A balance chemical equation of burning of ethene is C2H4 + 3O2 ____ 2CO2 + 2H2O now according to balance chemical equation 1 mole of ethene burn by using 3 moles of oxygen so to burn 10 moles of ethene 3 x 10 30 moles of oxygen will be required.
Butane lighters burn hotter but use up fuel fast compared to regular lighter fluid lighters which do not burn as hot but do not use up fuel as fast.**The answer is found in chemistry. Butane is a specific chemical, ie. C4H10; an alkane with four carbons and ten hydrogens. Lighter fluid is not so specific in its contents - it is generally defined as a highly combustible (thus high octane) hydrocarbon; Naptha.
Butane
You need to state temperature and pressure of the gases I think, from this you can find the number of moles of both. The equation is 2H2 + O2 => 2H2O calculate the moles burned (for every 2 moles h2, 1 mole of O2 will burn.