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6 January, 14:00

Hydrogen gas (a potential future fuel) can be formed by the reaction of methane with water according to the following equation: CH4 (g) + H2O (g) →CO (g) + 3H2 (g) In a particular reaction, 25.5 L of methane gas (measured at a pressure of 734 torr and a temperature of 25 ∘C) is mixed with 22.6 L of water vapor (measured at a pressure of 704 torr and a temperature of 125 ∘C). The reaction produces 26.4 L of hydrogen gas measured at STP.

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  1. 6 January, 15:24
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    Let us assume that all gases are ideal. So we can use the formula:

    PV = nRT

    The reaction is:

    CH4 (g) + H2O (g) → CO (g) + 3H2 (g)

    First we determine what the limiting reactant is. This can be done by calculating for the number of moles (n) for each reactant.

    For CH4:

    nCH4 = (734 torr) (25.5 L) / (62.36367 L torr / mol K) (298.15 K)

    nCH4 = 1 mol

    For H2O:

    nH2O = (704 torr) (22.6 L) / (62.36367 L torr / mol K) (398.15 K)

    nH2O = 0.64 mol

    Therefore H2O is the limiting reactant therefore the theoretical moles of H2 produced is:

    nH2 (theo) = 0.64 mol * (3 mol H2 / 1 mol H2O) = 1.92 mol

    The actual moles of H2 is:

    nH2 (actual) = (750 torr) (26.4 L) / (62.36367 L torr / mol K) (273.15 K) = 1.16 mol

    Therefore the yield is:

    % yield = 1.16 / 1.92 * 100%

    % yield = 60.42%
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