Question #5ce05

1 Answer
May 29, 2017

"C"_8"H"_{16}"O"_4.

Explanation:

First figure out how much carbon there is per mole of the substance X:

({54.5% "C"}/{100%})×{176" g"}/{"mol X"}={96" g C"}/{"mol X"}

Then one mole of carbon is 12 grams (atomic mass), so:

{96" g C"}/{"mol X"}×{1" mol C"}/{12"g C"}={8" mol C"}/{"mol X"}

So we have "C"_8 in the formula.

Do the same with hydrogen:

{9.09% "H"}/{100%}×{176" g"}/{"mol X"}={16" g H"}/{"mol X"}

{16" g H"}/{"mol X"}×{1" mol H"}/{1"g H"}={16" mol H"}/{"mol X"}

Thus "C"_8 "H"_{16}.

Now for the tricky part. When chemists report an elemental analysis and it adds up to less than 100%, the difference is generally attributed to oxygen. Our analytical methods, constrained by working in an oxygenated and water-laden world, do not in general detect or measure oxygen directly. Instead we infer it by difference after accounting for the other elements.

Here we found that 176" g X" contains 96" g C" and 16" g H". Subtracting then gives:

176" g X"- 96" g C" - 16" g H" = 64" g O"#

So then:

{64" g O"}/{"mol X"}×{1" mol O"}/{16"g O"}={4" mol O"}/{"mol X"}

So one mole of X contains four moles of oxygen to go with eight moles of carbon and 16 miles of hydrogen. Thus C"_8"H"_{16}"O"_4.