Ask Question
25 November, 14:01

A certain chemical reaction releases 36.2 kJ/g of heat for each gram of reactant consumed. How can you calculate what mass of reactant will produce 1360 J of heat?

+4
Answers (1)
  1. 25 November, 14:29
    0
    0.038 g of reactant

    Explanation:

    Data given:

    Heat release for each gram of reactant consumption = 36.2 kJ/g

    mass of reactant that release 1360 J of heat = ?

    Solution:

    As 36.2 kJ of heat release per gram of reactant consumption so first we will convert KJ to J

    As we know

    1 KJ = 1000 J

    So

    36.2 kJ = 36.2 x 1000 = 36200 J

    So it means that in chemical reaction 36200 J of heat release for each gram of reactant consumed so how much mass of reactant will be consumed if 1360 J heat will release

    Apply unity formula

    36200 J of heat release ≅ 1 gram of reactant

    1360 J of heat release ≅ X gram of reactant

    Do cross multiplication

    X gram of reactant = 1 g x 1360 J / 36200 J

    X gram of reactant = 0.038 g

    So 0.038 g of reactant will produce 1360 J of heat.
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Find an answer to your question 👍 “A certain chemical reaction releases 36.2 kJ/g of heat for each gram of reactant consumed. How can you calculate what mass of reactant will ...” in 📗 Chemistry if the answers seem to be not correct or there’s no answer. Try a smart search to find answers to similar questions.
Search for Other Answers