Question #ddd3d

1 Answer
Feb 8, 2018

The simplest (or "empirical") formula is C_3H_8O_3

Explanation:

First, we take the masses of the two products and convert these to moles:

moles CO_2 = 1.448g-:44.0 g/"mol" = 0.0329 mol

Since CO_2 molecules contain one C atom each, this means there is 0.0329 mol of C atoms in the products. Therefore, the glycerol also contained 0.0329 mol of carbon.

moles H_2O= 0.790g-:18g/"mol"=0.0439 mol

Since h_2O molecules each contain ywo atoms of H, the product must contain 2xx0.0439 = 0.0878 mol of H atoms. Therefore, the glycerol also contained 0.0878 mol of H.

To find the amount of oxygen in the glycerol, we must first determine the total mass of the above amounts of C and H:

Mass of C = 0.0329 "mol" xx 12g/"mol" = 0.395g

Mass of H = 0.0878 "mol"xx1.0 g/mol=0.0878g

Total mass of C + H = 0.483g

But the original sample was 1.010g, so the mass we have not yet accounted for must be the oxygen atoms in glycerol.

1.010 - 0.483 = 0.527g

moles of O = 0.527g-:16g/"mol" = 0.0329 mol

Looking at the three quantities in ratio form, we have:

Moles C:H:O = 0.0329:0.0878:0.0329

To simplify this ratio, we divide each value by the smallest (0.0329). This gives us:

Moles C:H:O = 1:2.67:1

Now, multiply each term by 3 (because the ".67" part of the H term is two-thirds) to get whole numbers:

Moles C:H:O = 3:8:3

and the simplest (or "empirical") formula is C_3H_8O_3