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3 January, 13:37

Consider the reaction of zn metal with hydrochloric acid: zn (s) + 2hcl (aq) → zncl2 (aq) + h2 (g) if 7.50 g of zn is reacted with 0.225 moles of hcl in a 2.00 l container what pressure does the generated h2 exert against the container walls at 25.8 ℃?

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  1. 3 January, 13:57
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    The balanced equation for the reaction is as follows;

    Zn + 2HCl - - > ZnCl₂ + H₂

    we need to first find which is the limiting reactant

    stoichiometry of Zn to HCl is 1:2

    number of Zn moles - 7.50 g / 65.4 g/mol = 0.115 mol

    number of HCl moles - 0.225 mol

    if Zn is the limiting reactant

    according to molar ratio 1:2

    amount of 0.115 mol of Zn should react with - 2 x 0.115 = 0.23 mol

    but only 0.225 mol of HCl present therefore HCl is the limiting reactant

    amount of products formed depends on amount of HCl present

    stoichiometry of HCl to H₂ is 2:1

    number of H₂ moles formed - 0.225 / 2 = 0.113 mol

    we can use the ideal gas law equation to find the pressure exerted

    PV = nRT

    where

    P - pressure

    V - volume - 2.00 x 10⁻³ m³

    n - number of moles - 0.113 mol

    R - universal gas constant - 8.314 Jmol⁻¹K⁻¹

    T - temperature - 25.8 °C + 273 = 298.8 K

    substituting these values in the equation

    P x 2.00 x 10⁻³ m³ = 0.113 mol x 8.314 Jmol⁻¹K⁻¹ x 298.8 K

    P = 140.4 kPa
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