Hydrogen burns in air at a temperature well above 100°C to form water - Edexcel - GCSE Chemistry - Question 10 - 2018 - Paper 1
Question 10
Hydrogen burns in air at a temperature well above 100°C to form water.
(i) The boiling points of hydrogen and water are shown in Figure 15.
Use this information to... show full transcript
Worked Solution & Example Answer:Hydrogen burns in air at a temperature well above 100°C to form water - Edexcel - GCSE Chemistry - Question 10 - 2018 - Paper 1
Step 1
Use this information to add the missing state symbols to the equation for the reaction taking place as the hydrogen burns.
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Answer
The correct equation with state symbols is:
2H2(g)+O2(g)→2H2O(l)
In this equation, hydrogen is in the gaseous state (g) and water is in the liquid state (l) at temperatures above 100°C.
Step 2
State how the equation shows that the atom economy is 100%.
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Answer
The atom economy is calculated by the formula:
ext{Atom Economy} = rac{ ext{mass of useful products}}{ ext{total mass of reactants}} imes 100
In the equation, all reactant atoms are converted into a single product, water (H₂O), with no by-products or wasted atoms. Hence, the atom economy is 100%, since the mass of the useful product equals the total mass of reactants used in the reaction.
Step 3
Calculate the atom economy for the production of lead in this reaction.
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Answer
First, we identify the relative formula masses involved: