OKay here's what I have.
Sodium metabisulfite: Na2S2O5 + H2O = 2NaHSO3 (sodium bisulfite)
And sodium bisulfite: NaHSO3 + H2O = H2SO3 (sulfurous acid)
Meanwhile, in water sulfur dioxide: SO2 + H2O =
H2SO3
The formula weight of sodium bisulfite is 104.17; sodium metabisulfite is 190.1; and sulfur dioxide is 64
If i start out with 10grams of sodium bisulfite that's 0.096 moles and 1 mole of bisulfite produces 1 mole of sulfurous acid, same as sulfur dioxide, which is 64g/mole so the equivalent of 6.14g SO2.
Which is 61.44% of the bisulfite I weighed out.
Yes?
Following the same calculations, 10 grams of metabisulfite is 0.053 moles, but one mole of metabisulfite produces two moles of bisulfite which goes one to one with sulfurous acid, equivalent to 1 mole SO2 = 6.733 grams or 67.33% of the original weight.
Does this make sense?
-LL