Elemental sulfur occurs as octatomie molecules, S_8. What mass of fluorine gas is needed to react completely with 28.6 g of sulfur to form sulfar hexafluoride?

1 Answer
Sep 23, 2016

Approx. 100*g.

Explanation:

We need (i) a stoichiometric equation:

S(s) + 3F_2(g) rarr SF_6(g).

And (ii) the molar equivalence of sulfur and fluorine =

(28.6*g)/(32.06*g*mol^-1) = 0.892*mol.

And thus 0.892xx3xx38.00*g*mol^-1 ~= 100*g fluorine gas are required.

Just a note on the molecularity of sulfur, of course I could have treated it as S_8 as you did. The arithmetic is a bit easier if I give the equation as written above: 3 equiv of fluorine gas react with 1 equiv of sulfur. Note that fluorine, like all the other elemental gases (SAVE FOR THE NOBLE GASES), is binuclear, i.e. a diatomic molecule.