Combustion analysis of a 12.01 g sample of tartaric acts - which contains only carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen - produced 14.08 g CO2 and 4.32 g H2O. What is the empirical formula for tartaric acid?

1 Answer
Jun 9, 2018

"Empirical formula of tartaric acid"-=C_2H_3O_3

Explanation:

We address the molar quantities of carbon, and hydrogen .... convert these into masses, and then address the empirical formula.

"Moles of carbon dioxide"=(14.01*g)/(44.01*g*mol^-1)=0.3183*mol

And thus mass of carbon...-=0.3183*molxx12.011*g*mol^-1=3.824*g

"Moles of water"=(4.32*g)/(18.01*g*mol^-1)=0.2399*mol

And thus mass of hydrogen...-=2xx0.2399*molxx1.00794*g*mol^-1=0.4835*g

The balance of the mass....12.01*g-0.4835*g-3.824*g=7.702*g...represents the mass of oxygen....a molar quantity of (7.702*g)/(16.00*g*mol^-1)=0.4814*mol

And so we divide thru by the LEAST molar quantity, that of OXYGEN, to get a trial empirical formula of...

C_((0.3183*mol)/(0.2399*mol))H_((0.4814*mol)/(0.2399*mol))O_((0.4814*mol)/(0.2399*mol)) -= C_(1.33)H_(2.00)O_(2)..

But by definition, the "empirical formula" "IS THE SIMPLEST WHOLE NUMBER ratio..." and so we multiply the calculated empirical formula by a factor of THREE...

3xx{C_(1.33)H_(2.00)O_(2)}-=C_4H_6O_6-=C_2H_3O_3