Question
Question: Carbon suboxide \(\left( {{\text{C}}_{3}}{{\text{O}}_{2}} \right)\) is formed when: (A) carbon rea...
Carbon suboxide (C3O2) is formed when:
(A) carbon reacts with concentrated H2SO4
(B) malonic acid reacts with P4O10
(C) carbon reacts with strong alkali solution
(D) oxalic acid is heated strongly
Solution
Carbon suboxide is an anhydride of a dicarboxylic acid and is produced when the carboxylic acid of the molecular formula C3H4O4 is treated with a strong dehydrating agent.
Complete step by step solution: Carbon suboxide, as the name suggests, belongs to the system of oxide of carbon and its chemical formula is C3O2. It is a linear molecule and since its structural formula contains four cumulative bonds (consecutive carbons attached by double bonds); it comes under the category of cumulene.
It is formed when a dry mixture of phosphorus pentoxide and malonic acid is heated. In this process phosphorus pentoxide acts as a strong dehydrating agent and it is an anhydride of phosphoric acid.
The reaction involved in the synthesis of carbon suboxide is given below:
Additional information: It is a lacrimatory gas which stimulates tears in our eyes. It can be carefully stored as a gas in a bulb but at certain conditions (300 k, 1 atm), the suboxide forms a yellow, red, or brown colored polymer.
Hence, the correct answer to the given question is (B) malonic acid reacts with P4O10.
Note: Phosphorus pentoxide exists as a dimer in its usual forms and that is why it is written as P4O10 more often and not as P2O5. However, both perform the same reactions and the only difference is that the latter is the empirical formula of the former.