Chemistry, asked by varsharathod382005, 4 months ago

calculate the volume and mass of oxygen needed for combustion of 100ml of acetylene​

Answers

Answered by kartikstark3
0

Answer:

ereof, what volume of o2 is required for complete combustion?

×22.4=56L for complete combustion. 1 moles of acetylene that is 22.4L produce 2 moles that is 2×22.4=44.8L of carbon dioxide.

Beside above, how do you calculate air needed for combustion? Therefore the quantity of oxygen required for combustion of 1 kg of the fuel is: (2.66C + 8H + S) kg. ∴ Oxygen required from air for the complete combustion of fuel will be (2.66C + 8H + S – O) which can be written as 2.66C + 8 (H – O/8) + S, the term in the bracket being known as the available hydrogen.

Also know, how much oxygen is required for complete combustion of 560g of ethene?

1.96 kg of oxygen is required.

Does the amount of available oxygen affect combustion?

If sufficient oxygen is available, combustion is complete. When the amount of oxidizer able to react with the fuel is insufficient, the oxidation reactions lead to the formation of incomplete combustion products such as carbon monoxide (CO), hydrocarbons species, etc.

27 Related Question Answers Found

What volume of oxygen is required for the complete combustion of propane?

Answer: 1L of propane required 5L of Oxygen gas.

 

How do you calculate oxygen volume?

Multiply the volume (in Liters) of the liquid oxygen by 1,000 to convert it to milliliters (ml). In our example 70 L will be converted to 70,000 ml. Multiply the volume of the liquid oxygen by its density, 1.14 g/ml, to calculate the mass of the compound.

 

What volume of oxygen would be required to burn completely 400ml of acetylene?

1000 ml

 

What is the volume of oxygen required for the complete combustion of 4 Litre of ethane?

4 litres of ethane will require = 3.5×4=14 litres of oxygen. Hence, 4 litres of ethane requires 14 litres of oxygen for combustion.

 

What volume of oxygen is required for complete combustion of 2 volumes of acetylene gas at NTP?

Answer: According to reaction, At STP; 1 mole of acetylene that is 22.4L require 5/2 moles of oxygen that is 5 2 × 22 . 4 = 56 L for complete combustion.

 

How much volume of oxygen at STP in Litres is?

At STP, one mole of oxygen ocupies a volume of 22.4 L.

 

What is the volume of 2.5 moles of o2 at STP?

At STP (Standard Temperature and Pressure:0º C and 1 atm), 1 mole of gas takes up 22.4 L of volume.

 

What is the weight of oxygen required for the complete combination of 2.8 kg of ethylene?

0.028 kg (Molar mass of ethylene) needs 3 x 0.032 = 0.096 kg of oxygen. 1 kg of ethylene will need (0.096/0.028) = 3.42 kg of oxygen. So, 2.8 kg of ethylene will need (3.42 x 2.8) = 9.6 kg of oxygen.

 

How much air is required for combustion of natural gas?

For natural gas fired burners, the stoichiometric air required is 9.4-11 ft.3 / 1.0 ft. of natural gas, or approximately an air-to-gas ratio of approximately 10:1. This results in an excess oxygen level of 2%. In the combustion zone, it is difficult to measure excess air.

 

Which fuel requires lowest amount of excess air for combustion?

Combustion efficiency

Excess air depends on type of fuel. Normally solid fuels require more excess air than liquid fuels and gaseous fuels. Gaseous fuels require least amount of excess air.

 

Why excess air is required for complete combustion?

Because the air and fuel cannot mix perfectly in a burner, excess air is needed to completely burn the fuel. Also, with the furnace or boiler firebox operating at a slightly negative gauge pressure, any leaks in the heater will suck air into firebox that doesn't go through the burners.

 

What is excess air ratio?

Excess Air Coefficient - the ratio of the actual amount (mass) of air, in which fuel is burned, to the amount required for complete combustion of fuel (stoichiometric amount). In order to obtain complete combustion, it is usually necessary to provide more air than it is apparent from the stoichiometric equations.

 

What is fuel combustion?

Combustion is a chemical process in which a substance reacts rapidly with oxygen and gives off heat. When a hydrogen-carbon-based fuel (like gasoline) burns, the exhaust includes water (hydrogen + oxygen) and carbon dioxide (carbon + oxygen).

 

Explanation:

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