Here the sulfuric acid is not a catalyst as it normally works.. The high concentration of sulfuric adsorbs easily water and this is eliminated out of the formic acid. Carbon oxide is left.
The sulfuric acid gets diluted through this process and the reaction will stop. At least you need more and more fresh acid dot get it run continuously.
To calculate you have to know the concentration. 8 drops means nothing. How many ml or g HCOOH do you have. With this information you can get the moles of the acid and also the moles of the CO. With the ideal gas equation you can calculate the volume.
Thanks Hunter2,
So would the reaction be more like:
H
2SO
4 + HCOOH
CO + H
2SO
4*H
2O ?
So lets see if I get this right..
1mol H
2SO
4 (98.079g/mol) (1ml/1.840g) = 53.304 mL H
2SO
41mol HCOOH (46.02538g/mol) (1ml/1.220g) = 37.726 mlL HCOOH
1mol CO (28.01g/mol) (1m^3/1150g) = .0243565 m^3 CO
Assuming if I use 53.304ml H2SO4 and 37.726ml HCOOH, I will get .0243565 m^3 CO?
Or will I produce much less CO since the H2SO4 is getting diluted, which means I need more than 53.304mL to fully react the formic acid.
Thanks!