Question
Question: What weight of zinc will react with dilute sulphuric acid to liberate \(1000mL\) of hydrogen at \({2...
What weight of zinc will react with dilute sulphuric acid to liberate 1000mL of hydrogen at 27∘C and 750mm of Hg pressure?
Solution
The ideal gas law is generally called the general gas equation. It is the equation of state of a hypothetical ideal gas. This equation relates the pressure, temperature, amount, and temperature of gas with each other.
Formula used: PV=nRT
n=Mm
Where P is pressure, V is volume, n is number of moles, R is gas constant T is temperature, m is given mass and M is molecular mass of substance.
Complete step by step answer:
In this question we have to find the weight of zinc which will react with dilute sulphuric acid to liberate 1000mL of hydrogen at 27∘C and 750mm of Hg pressure. According to ideal gas equation:
PV=nRT
Given pressure is 750mm of Hg=760750atm
Gas constant(R)=0.08206LatmK−1mol−1
Temperature(T)=27∘C=27+273=300K
Volume(V)=1000mL=1L
Substituting these values in above equation:
760750×1=n×0.08206×300
Solving this we get:
n=0.04
So, number of moles are 0.04
Molecular mass of zinc is 65 so we can calculate given mass of zinc by using formula:
n=Mm
Substituting the values:
0.04=65m
Solving this equation we will get:
m=2.605
So, the answer is 2.605g
Additional information: An ideal gas has a number of properties; real gases often exhibit behavior very close to ideal. The properties of an ideal gas are:
An ideal gas consists of a large number of identical molecules.
The volume occupied by the molecules themselves is negligible compared to the volume occupied by the gas.
The molecules obey Newton's laws of motion, and they move in random motion.
The molecules experience forces only during collisions; any collisions are completely elastic and take a negligible amount of time.
Note:
The ideal gas model tends to fail at lower temperatures or higher pressures when intermolecular forces and molecular size becomes important. It also fails for most heavy gases, such as many refrigerants, and for gases with strong intermolecular forces, notably water vapor.