How many moles of oxygen react with 6 moles of octane?
2 Answers
Octane and oxygen react in a combustion reaction, producing carbon dioxide and water in this reaction (after balancing the equation):
Multiply both sides by
Clearly,
This assumes that octane is completely combusted. However, if there is incomplete combustion, carbon monoxide and soot can be produced, and a different number of moles of oxygen will react with the octane.
Approx.
Explanation:
When you deal with hydrocarbon combustion, the standard protocol is to (i) balance the carbons as carbon dioxide; (ii) balance the hydrogens as water; and (iii) balance the dioxygen REACTANT....
We assume complete combustion to carbon dioxide and water...and we write the UNBALANCED equation...
Balance the carbons.....
Then balance the hydrogens as WATER.....
Then balance the oxygens.....
You can double the entire equation if you like..to remove the half-integral coefficient. I think the arithmetic is easier this way...
AND the question proposes the complete combustion of
We could further propose incomplete combustion to give SOME
How much carbon or carbon monoxide we get (and certainly we get some in the internal combustion or diesel engines) is determined by experiment.