In a reactor CaO and C are added in stoichiometric amounts. A sample was taken from the reactor and after careful dissolution in HCl (a gas was intensively made, c(HCl)=0.4M, V=750ml)), the solution was filtrated (mass of the non-dissolved residue was 0.879g), and water was added until the volume became 1dm
3. For the titration of 20cm
3 of this solution, 9.86ml of NaOH (c=0.1M) were spent. What was the yield (in percents)of the reaction that took place in the reactor?
CaO+C
Ca+CO
Then:
CaO+2HCl
CaCl
2+H
2O
Ca+2HCl
CaCl
2+H
2The non-dissolved residue should be C (n=0.879/12=0.07325mol, meaning that there was 0.07325mol of CaO). The remaining HCl was titrated. n of HCl titrated is 0.00986*0.1, in the 1dm
3 there was 50 times more HCl, so the amount of HCl that reacted with Ca and CaO is: n=0.75*0.4-0.00986*0.1*50=0.2507mol of HCl.
What to do now? The HCl reacted with (0.07325-x)mol of CaO, and with xmol of Ca, meaning that HCl reacted with 0.07325mol of Ca
2+, but that doesn't help me.