When "4 g H"_2 and "32 g O"_2 are mixed, what is the partial pressure of oxygen at a total pressure of P?

1 Answer
Jul 6, 2017

About 2/3 of P.

Without your calculator, what is the fraction of P that oxygen gas exerts?


For ideal gases, the partial pressure is given by

P_i = chi_iP,

where:

  • P is the total pressure.
  • P_i is the pressure of gas i by itself, assuming it is not interacting with anything else.
  • chi_i = (n_i)/(n_1 + n_2 + . . . + n_N) is the mol fraction of gas i in the container.
  • n_i is the mols of gas i.

The fraction of the total pressure P is given by

chi_i = P_i/P

And so, all we need to do is find the mols of each gas and calculate the mol fraction of "H"_2, i.e.:

chi_(H_2) = (n_(H_2))/(n_(H_2) + n_(O_2))

The mols of "H"_2 are given by:

4 cancel("g H"_2) xx "1 mol H"_2/(2.0158 cancel("g H"_2))

= "1.984 mols"

The mols of "O"_2 are given by:

32 cancel("g O"_2) xx "1 mol O"_2/(31.998 cancel("g O"_2))

= "1.000 mols"

Therefore, the fraction of P that "H"_2 exerts is given by

color(blue)(chi_(H_2)) = ("1.984 mols")/("1.984 mols H"_2 + "1.000 mols O"_2)

= color(blue)(0.665)

This is about color(blue)(2/3) color(blue)("of") color(blue)(P).