How do we represent the complete combustion of octane, C8H18(l)?

2 Answers
Mar 4, 2016

C8H18(l)+252O2(g)8CO2(g)+9H2O(l)

Explanation:

The above equation is stoichiometrically balanced: garbage out equals garbage in. If you like you can double the equation to remove the non-integral coefficient. I have never seen the need to do so, inasmuch the arithmetic is easier when you use this form with the 1 equivalent of hydrocarbon reactant.

So 2 questions with regard to this reaction: (i) How does energy transfer in this reaction; (ii) does this represent an oxidation reduction reaction?

Mar 4, 2016

We need to have the same number of moles of each substance on each side. The balanced equation is:

C8H18+252 O2=8 CO2+9 H2O or 2 C8H18+25 O2=16 CO2+18 H2O

Explanation:

We start out with the unbalanced equation:

a C8H18+b O2=c CO2+d H2O

We need to find the values of the coefficients a,b,c and d to balance the equation.

For the moment, let's leave a as 1. There are 8 moles of C on the left, so to balance we need 8 moles of C on the right, so let's make c=8, because each CO2 contains 1.

C8H18+b O2=8 CO2+d H2O

There are 18 moles of H on the left so we need 18 on the right, but each H2O contains 2, so we make d=9.

C8H18+b O2=8 CO2+9 H2O

Now we turn our attention to the right side. There are two O in each of 8 CO2 for a total of 16 in the carbon dioxide and one in each of 9 H2O for a total of 9 in the water, so we need 25 O all together.

On the left, each O2 contains two O, so one way to balance the equation is to take 252 of them:

C8H18+ 252O2= 8 CO2+9 H2O

If the fraction makes you uncomfortable, another way is to multiply all the coefficients by two:

2 C8H18+25 O2=16 CO2+18 H2O