Hello everybody! I'm taking an Introductory class in chemistry for no credit, in order to prepare myself for the pre-med program at my university. This class is online. Anyways, my instructor gave me an equation to balance in the first day of class, as some extra practice since I have a great interest in chemistry, although I never took it in high school.
The issue now, the instructor gave me an equation, I balanced it (or so I thought), and even ran the equation through a calculator online- which came up with the same results. Unfortunately, the instructor says I'm incorrect. I just wanted a second opinion. If I'm counting the atoms wrong, please let me know..
I was told to balance:
C6H5COOH + O2 = CO2 + H2O
I came up with:
2C6H5COOH + 15O2 = 14CO2 + 6H20
My logic in counting the atoms was this (I'll only do the left)
C: There's 14 C on the left. I got this by taking the coefficient (2) times C6, which equals 12 C, then 2 times the second Carbon, which equals 2. Therefore, 14 C.
O: There is two Oxygen atoms on the "COOH" part, times the coefficient, equals 4 O. Then 15 O2 = 30 O, so I figure there is 34 O.
H: There's 2 (coefficient again) times H5 = 10 H. Then 2 times the second hydrogen in the statement, so that's 12 H.
On the right side, I figure there is 34 O, because 14CO2 (14 x O2 = 28 O, then 6 x O on the 6H20 part). etc..that's pretty much the logic I used to achieve these numbers.
The instructor says the following:
I count 32 O on the left and 34 on the right.
13 C on the left and 14 C on the right
Only H is balanced.
Her answer:
2 C7H6O2 +15 O2 => 14CO2 + 6 H2O
Any thoughts? I don't mind if I am doing it wrong, but I just want to be sure, because I THOUGHT I understood what I was doing, but I'm not sure at all now. I just want to build a solid foundation before I get too deep into this stuff. Thanks in advance everybody!