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Determination of Molar Mass of Propane or . . . How to correctly use downward displacement of water to collect a gas

Determination of Molar Mass of Propane

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Determination of Molar Mass of Propane. or . . . How to correctly use downward displacement of water to collect a gas. Collection of gas by downward displacement of water. What two conditions must a gas meet in order to be amenable to collection by d.d. of water? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Determination of Molar Mass of Propane

Determination of Molar Mass of Propane

or . . .

How to correctly use downward displacement of water to collect a gas

Page 2: Determination of Molar Mass of Propane

Collection of gas by downward displacement of water

Page 3: Determination of Molar Mass of Propane

What two conditions must a gas meet in order to be amenable to collection by d.d. of water?

1. Gas cannot react with water;

2. Gas must not be water soluble.

Page 4: Determination of Molar Mass of Propane
Page 6: Determination of Molar Mass of Propane

Some Questions

• How can we account for the amount of water vapour present in the gas collected?

• What experimental condition might affect the amount of water vapour “swept up”?

Temperature.

We can account for the amount of water vapour present in a gas collected by d.d. of water . . .

Page 7: Determination of Molar Mass of Propane

Pressure of Water Vapour (p 558)

Temperature (oC)

Pressure (kPa)

19 2.20

20 2.33

21 2.49

22 2.81

23 2.99

24 3.17

25 3.36

Page 8: Determination of Molar Mass of Propane

How do we use the pressure of water vapour table?

Do we add or subtract the pressure of water vapour to the pressure of the gas collected?

We subtract it.

If P of collected gas is 101.03 kPa at 20oC, we adjust the pressure by subtracting the pressure of water vapour at 20oC.

Pdry gas = (101.03 – 2.33) = 98.70 kPa

Page 11: Determination of Molar Mass of Propane

Sample Problem 1A sample of hydrogen is collected by d.d. of

water using the following reaction:

Mg(s) + 2 HCl(aq) MgCl2(aq) + H2(g)

What volume of dry hydrogen can be expected when 0.25 g of Mg reacts with excess HCl? What additional info req’d?

The water level inside and outside the collection vessel are equal; temperature is 23oC, atmospheric pressure is 102.3 kPa.

Page 12: Determination of Molar Mass of Propane

1 mol Mg 1 mol H2

0.25 g↓ /24.3 g/mol

0.0103 mol → → → → → → → 0.0103 mol

n = 0.0103 mol H2

T = 23oC, or

= 296 K. Is the PH2 = Patm? (refer to table)

PH2 = (102.3 – 2.99) = 99.31 kPa R = 8.31 L*kPa/(mol*K) V = (n*R*T)/P

= 0.26 L of dry H2 expected.

Page 14: Determination of Molar Mass of Propane

Sample Data:

mass of propane cylinder before = 725.34 g

mass of propane cylinder after = 724.52 g

Mass of propane collected = 0.82 g

Twater = Troom = 21.7oC

Patm = 761.9 mmHg = 101.5 kPa

Page 15: Determination of Molar Mass of Propane

V of propane collected = 0.45 L (Water level inside and outside collection vessel are equal. Don’t forget to account for Pwater vapour.)

Ppropane = (101.5 – 2.81) = 98.7 kPa

Page 16: Determination of Molar Mass of Propane

PV = nRT

n = PV/RT

= (98.7 kPa)*(0.45 L)

(8.314 LkPamol-1K-1)*(22 + 273)K

= 0.01811 mol of dry propane collected

Molar mass of propane = 0.82 g/0.01811 mol

= 45 g/mol

Accepted value = 44 g/mol (< 3% error)

Page 17: Determination of Molar Mass of Propane

HW

P 560 # 40