SO2 is the heaviest
When hydrogen sulfide (H2S) burns, it is oxidized to form sulfur dioxide (SO2) gas.
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.
The balanced equation for the reaction is: 2NH3(g) + H2S(g) → (NH4)2S(s)
The balanced equation for the reaction is: 2H2S + 3O2 -> 2H2O + 2SO2. Given the stoichiometry, 81 tons of H2S reacting with 114 tons of O2 would produce 43 tons of water and 57 tons of SO2.
Yes, SO2 is considered a greenhouse gas.
When hydrogen sulfide (H2S) burns, it is oxidized to form sulfur dioxide (SO2) gas.
Burning of H2S produce SO2 and water.SO2 is the toxic gas.
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.
NH3 is in equilibrium with NH4+ and H2S is in equilibrium with HS- when dissolved in water.
Because burning H2S produces SO2 gas which is toxic and an air pollutant.
Volcanoes release H2S, HCl, SO2, CO2, etc.
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
The balanced equation for the reaction is: 2NH3(g) + H2S(g) → (NH4)2S(s)
No, remember any element heated to a high enough temperature will form a gaseous phase for instance mercury vapour would be heavier than H2S.
The balanced equation for the reaction is: 2H2S + 3O2 -> 2H2O + 2SO2. Given the stoichiometry, 81 tons of H2S reacting with 114 tons of O2 would produce 43 tons of water and 57 tons of SO2.
H2S is the chemical formula of hydrogen sulfide. The ion sulfite has the chemical formula SO2-3. The hydrogen sulfite ion has the chemical formula HSO-3.
Yes, SO2 is considered a greenhouse gas.