The explosive nitroglycerin (C3H5N3O9) decomposes rapidly upon
ignition or sudden impact according to the following balanced
equation:
4C3H5N3O9(l)→12CO2(g)+10H2O(g)+6N2(g)+O2(g)ΔH∘rxn=−5678kJ
Calculate the standard enthalpy of formation (ΔH∘f) for
nitroglycerin.
?=kJ/mol
The explosive nitroglycerin (C3H5N3O9) decomposes rapidly upon ignition or sudden impact according to the following bal...
explosive nitroglycerin (C3 HN3 O9) decomposes rapidly ignition or sudden impact according to the following balanced equation: 4CaHsN3 Os (12CO2 (g) 10H2O(g) 6N2(g) + O2(g) AHpR=-5678 kJ You may want to reference (Pages 277-280) Section 6.9 while completing this problem. Part A Calculate the standard enthalpy of formation (A Hë) for nitroglycerin. Express your answer using four significant figures. ν0 ΑΣφ kJ/mol ΔΗ- Submit Request Answer
3. The explosive nitroglycerin (C3H5N309) decomposes rapidly upon ignition or sudden impact according to the balanced equation: 4 C3H5N309(1) — 12 CO2(g) + 10 H2O(g) + 6 N2(g) + O2(8) AHx= -5678 kJ Calculate the standard enthalpy of formation (AH) for nitroglycerin.
The explosive nitroglycerin (C3HSN3O9) decomposes rapidly upon ignition or sudden impact according to the following unbalanced equation: 5. CO2+H2O + N2 + O2() C3H5N3O90 AHODm=-5678 k Balance this equation, and calculate the standard enthalpy of formation, AHr, of nitroglycerin.
Nitroglycerin (C3H5N309) decomposes explosively upon ignition or sudden impact according to the following balanced equation: 4C3H5N30 (1) ► 12 CO2(g) + 10 H2O(g) + 6 N2(g) + O2(g) Hºrxn--5678 kJ Compound CO2 HO AHⓇ(kJ/mol) at 298 K -393.5 -241.8 Determine whether each statement is true or false using the provided drop-down menus. 1) If 1.2 moles of C3H5N30, decompose, the energy change of the reaction (x) is -5,678 kJ. [Select 2) The reaction releases energy to the surroundings. (Select] 3)...
Nitroglycerin (227.1 g/mol) releases a large amount of energy and gaseous products upon decomposition. If 10.00 grams of nitroglycerin decomposes in an evacuated 1.00 L flask, what is the pressure inside the flask? Assume the temperature is 400 K and that the flask survives the explosion. 4C3H5N3O9(l) ® 6N2(g) + 12CO2(g) + 10H2O(g) + O2(g)
A 1.000 kg sample of an organic compound, C3H5N3O9, explodes and releases gases with a temperature of 1985°C at 836.0 atm. What is the volume of gas produced? (always balance equations) C3H5N3O9(s) → CO2(g) + H2O(g) + N2(g) + O2(g) The listed answers are: 5378 L, 742.2 L, 3525 L, 4730 L, 352.5 L My answer: We have: 1.000 kg --> 1.000x10^3 g =1,000 g C3H5N3O9 T= 1985C --> 1985C+273= 2258K P= 836.0 atm V=? Balanced equation: 4C3H5N3O9-->12CO2+10H2O+6N2+O2 C= 3*12.0107...
Assume that you have 1.15 g of nitroglycerin in a 579.5 mL steel container at 20.0 ∘C and 1.00 atm pressure. An explosion occurs, raising the temperature of the container and its contents to 425 ∘C. The balanced equation is 4C3H5N3O9(l)→12CO2(g)+10H2O(g)+6N2(g)+O2(g) (Figure 1) Part A How many moles of nitroglycerin were in the container originally? Part B How many moles of gas (air) were in the container originally? Part C How many moles of gas are in the container after...
1. Liquid trinitroglycerin, C3H5N3O9 decomposes into nitrogen gas, oxygen gas, carbon dioxide gas and liquid water at 298 K. The enthalpy for the reaction is -1514.4 kJ/mol. Write the balanced equation with phases Find the △Hf for C3H5N3O9 2. Consider a sample of 1.000 mol CO2(g) confined to a volume of 3.000 L at 0.0 C Calculate the pressure of the gas using ideal gas equation. Calculate the pressure using the van der Waals equation.
Propane (C3H8)burns according to the following balanced equation: C3H8(g)+5O2(g)→3CO2(g)+4H2O(g) Calculate ΔH∘rxnΔ for this reaction using standard enthalpies of formation. (The standard enthalpy of formation of gaseous propane is -103.9 kJ/molkJ/mol.) Express the enthalpy in kilojoules to four significant figures.
Can I have help with these questions based off the information provided? Information: The explosive picric acid is also known by the IUPAC name 2,4,6-Trinitrophenol. Picric acid is known as a primary explosive and the balanced equation for the explosion is 4 C6H3N3 O7 (aq) + 13 O2 (g) --> 6 H2O (g) + 6 N2 (g) + 24 CO2 (g) volume of gas produced by 1 g is 0.89 L Type bond broken # bond type Enthalpy (KJ/mol Total...