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The balanced chemical equation for the reaction between nitric acid (HNO3) and hydrogen sulfide (H2S) to produce sulfur (S), nitric oxide (NO), and water (H2O) is: 8HNO3 + 8H2S → S8 + 8NO + 10H2O
The balanced chemical equation for the reaction between oxygen (O2) and hydrogen sulfide (H2S) is: 2H2S + 3O2 -> 2SO2 + 2H2O From the equation, it is a 3:2 ratio of O2 to H2S. Therefore, if 2.3 moles of H2S are present, (2.3 moles H2S) * (3 moles O2 / 2 moles H2S) = 3.45 moles of O2 are needed.
For gases it is valid that the Volume ratio of reactants and products is the same as the mole ratio (in the balanced equation) when pressure and Temperature are kept coonstant. This is according to the general gas law (Boyle-Gay-Lussac): p.V = m.R.T2H2S + 3O2 --> 2H2O + 2SO2so 0.5 L H2S needs 0.5 * [3/2] = 0.75 L O2
The pH of a solution containing H2S would be acidic, as H2S is a weak acid. The exact pH value would depend on the concentration of H2S in the solution.
The formula for hydrosulfuric acid is H2S.
The mole ratio of H2S to Ag2S can be derived from the balanced chemical equation for the reaction between hydrogen sulfide (H2S) and silver sulfide (Ag2S). The balanced equation is typically represented as 2 H2S + Ag2S → 4 Ag + 2 H2O + 2 S. From this equation, the mole ratio of H2S to Ag2S is 2:1.
The balanced chemical equation for the reaction between nitric acid (HNO3) and hydrogen sulfide (H2S) to produce sulfur (S), nitric oxide (NO), and water (H2O) is: 8HNO3 + 8H2S → S8 + 8NO + 10H2O
The balanced chemical equation for the reaction between oxygen (O2) and hydrogen sulfide (H2S) is: 2H2S + 3O2 -> 2SO2 + 2H2O From the equation, it is a 3:2 ratio of O2 to H2S. Therefore, if 2.3 moles of H2S are present, (2.3 moles H2S) * (3 moles O2 / 2 moles H2S) = 3.45 moles of O2 are needed.
Using the balanced chemical equation, you can see that 2 moles of H2S will produce 2 moles of SO2. Therefore, 1 mole of H2S will produce 1 mole of SO2. Given that 14.2 L of SO2 gas is produced, you would need the same volume of H2S gas. For oxygen, the ratio of H2S to O2 is 3:2, so 1.5 times the volume of H2S gas is needed in O2 gas.
For gases it is valid that the Volume ratio of reactants and products is the same as the mole ratio (in the balanced equation) when pressure and Temperature are kept coonstant. This is according to the general gas law (Boyle-Gay-Lussac): p.V = m.R.T2H2S + 3O2 --> 2H2O + 2SO2so 0.5 L H2S needs 0.5 * [3/2] = 0.75 L O2
Though there is no common reaction known of how to 'consume' (whatever that may be: H2S and SO2 are both very toxic!) hydrogen sulfide, one might deduce the molar reaction ratio of H2S to SO2 from the 1 to 1 atomic sulfur content, this gives us equal amounts in moles H2S and SO2.Since 1.40 kg H2S equals 1.40(kg) / 0.03418(kg/molH2S) = 40.96 mole H2S one can easily calculate that the same amount SO2 weights 40.96(molSO2) * 0.06407(kg/molSO2) = 2.62 kg SO2 which equals 2.62(kgSO2) / 2.279(kg/m3) = 1.15 m3 SO2 gasMolar masses: 0.03418 kg/mol H2S and 0.06407 kg/mol SO2
Add an acid to Na2S.It will emit H2S.
H2S is a polar compound.It is not ionic.
The pH of a solution containing H2S would be acidic, as H2S is a weak acid. The exact pH value would depend on the concentration of H2S in the solution.
Hydrosulfuric acid is H2S. H2S (aq) (H2SO4 is sulfuric acid). The acids with "hydro" at the start of their names are all derived from dissolved gases, e.g. hydrochloric acid is aqueous hydrogen chloride, hydrocyanic acid is aqueous hydrogen cyanide etc.
The formula for hydrosulfuric acid is H2S.
H2S is a gas.It smells like rotten eggs.