The molar mass of carbon is 12.01 g/mol. From the given 700.0 g of carbon, you can calculate the number of moles present. Since charcoal is almost pure carbon, the mass of the charcoal produced will be the same as the mass of the carbon burnt, which is 700.0 g.
He did not collect the gas and dust released by the burning charcoal.
The reaction is: C + O2 = CO2 The volume (or the mass) of the released carbon dioxide depends on the concentration of carbon in charcoal; this is very variable.
No, the ashes from charcoal have a lesser mass than the original charcoal. When charcoal burns, it undergoes a chemical reaction that releases gases and leaves behind mostly carbon in the form of ashes.
In a chemical reaction the mass of reactants is equal to the mass of products; burning is a chemical reaction.
The mass of the dust formed on burning a piece of paper is likely to be less than the original mass of the paper. This is because burning paper results in a conversion of some of the paper's mass into gases and ash, which can float away. The remaining dust would likely be a small fraction of the original mass.
He did not collect the gas and dust released by the burning charcoal.
The heat produced by burning 1 mol of carbon to form CO2 is 393.5 kJ. To produce 510 kJ of heat, we utilize the ratio of heat produced to calculate the moles of CO2 produced as (510 kJ / 393.5 kJ) mol CO2. The molar mass of CO2 is 44.01 g/mol, so the mass of CO2 produced is (510/393.5) * 44.01 g.
The reaction is: C + O2 = CO2 The volume (or the mass) of the released carbon dioxide depends on the concentration of carbon in charcoal; this is very variable.
To calculate the mass of CO2 produced, you need to first determine the amount of carbon burned based on the heat produced and then use the stoichiometry of the combustion reaction of carbon to CO2. The balanced chemical equation for the combustion of carbon is C + O2 -> CO2. From this equation, you know that the molar ratio of C to CO2 is 1:1. Finally, you can calculate the mass of CO2 produced using the molar mass of CO2.
The law of conservation of mass states that mass is neither created nor destroyed in a chemical reaction; it is simply rearranged. An experiment to demonstrate this is burning a piece of paper: the mass of the paper before burning will be the same as the mass of the ashes, smoke, and gases produced after burning. This experiment confirms that the total mass before and after the reaction remains constant.
No, the ashes from charcoal have a lesser mass than the original charcoal. When charcoal burns, it undergoes a chemical reaction that releases gases and leaves behind mostly carbon in the form of ashes.
1.8
To calculate the grams of CO2 produced by burning 22 grams of C3H8, first determine the moles of C3H8 using its molar mass, then use the balanced chemical equation for the combustion of C3H8 to find the moles of CO2 produced, and finally convert moles of CO2 to grams using the molar mass of CO2.
Mass produced foods are foods that are produced by the thousands.
7000 grams
Burning 2 700 g of methane produce 70406 g of carbon dioxide.
gears are best produced in mass production by