The flame produced by the burner of a gas (propane) grill is a blue color when enough air mixes with the propane (C3H8) to burn it completely. For every gram of propane that flows through the burner, what volume of air is needed to burn it completely?
1 Answer
I got
Well, the main question is really, for
First, write the reaction and balance it to get:
#"C"_3"H"_8(g) + 5"O"_2(g) -> 3"CO"_2(g) + 4"H"_2"O"(g)# (the water is a gas since it is open to the air and thus doesn't condense.)
With
#cancel("1 g C"_3"H"_8) xx ("1 mol C"_3"H"_8)/(44.0962 cancel"g") = "0.0227 mols propane"#
Since the mol ratio of
Now, you were given the mol fraction of
#chi_(O_2(g)) = 0.210 -= (n_(O_2(g)))/(n_(t ot))#
The nice thing about mol fractions is that they are normalized to
So, if
#0.210/1.000 = ("0.1134 mols O"_2)/("??? mols air")#
And to match up to this mol fraction, we need
#PV = nRT# ,
#=> bbV ~~ (nRT)/P#
#= (("0.5399 mols air")("0.082057 L"cdot"atm/mol"cdot"K")(205.0 + 273.1"5 K"))/("1.250 atm")#
#=# #ulbb("16.95 L")# of air