If 2 grams of hydrogen gas are produced, how many moles of liquid water were decomposed?

2 Answers
May 14, 2018

1 mole

Explanation:

The equation for the decomposition of water is as follows

2 H_2O rarr 2 H_2 + O_22H2O2H2+O2

As you can see, there is a 1:1 ratio between water and hydrogen gas, so they will both have the same number of moles.

To work out the number of moles of hydrogen, use the equation

"Number of moles" = "Mass of the substance" /"Molar mass of the substance"Number of moles=Mass of the substanceMolar mass of the substance

So the number of moles of hydrogen produced is

2/2 = 1" moles"22=1 moles

since the atomic mass of a hydrogen atom is 1 and since hydrogen is a diatomic molecule, the molar mass is 2.

Therefore, if the number of moles of hydrogen is 1 then the number of moles of water must also be 1 since both substances have a 1:1 ratio with each other.

May 14, 2018

Would it not be ONE mole of water.....?

Explanation:

We interrogate the chemical reaction...

underbrace(H_2O(g))_"18 g" +Deltararr underbrace(H_2(g) + 1/2O_2(g))_"2 g + 16 g"

And given the equation, this shows the formation of 16*g dioxygen gas and 2*g of dihydrogen gas, from an 18*g mass of water...