I feel bad - this problem is all lonely and neglected, so I'll take a stab at it. I’m not sure about some of my answers, because nuclear radiolysis reactions are not really my area of expertise, but what they heck.
I will describe my thought process, then provide my answers. Let’s see how close I got.
The most obvious place for me to start was actually molecule
C.
C is radioactive like
A, but here we’re given two important clues: one is the low molecular weights involved and the other is that the product of the radioactive decay is a light helium,
3He. There really are two major possibilities here for a radioactive isotope with low molecular weight: tritium and carbon-14. Both undergo beta decay, but only tritium gives up a light helium as well. Therefore
C and
A, I conclude, both involve tritium, henceforth abbreviated as T.
Moving to
A. There are a couple of common gases that have tritium in them that might react with cupric oxide: di-tritium, tritiated ammonia, and tritiated methane. NT
3 and T
2 both react with cupric oxide to give water, copper metal, and – in the case of ammonia – nitrogen gas. Tritiated methane produces tritiated water and CO
2. Not much help at the moment, since the products are somewhat similar.
Ok, I file that in the back of my mind and take a look at the reaction in the middle, the one with aluminum. The compound with 53% by mass of aluminum is clearly aluminum oxide, Al
2O
3. Well, it’s the first possibility I checked since it’s the most obvious. Sadly, and most unfairly, I get no credit for this achievement because it’s not one of my unknowns. But it does tell me that mystery compound
C must contain my tritium source. I know
C must also react with water to give an alcohol (
E), so therefore I conclude that
C must have some carbon in it, and playing around a little with the weights to get MW = 24 gives me a convenient tritiated methane, CT
4, for compound
C. Given that this was also one of my possibilities for
A, and thinking it’d be rather redundant to have the same compound for
A and
C, I eliminate CT
4 from my possibilities for
A.
My original thought for
M was a tritiated version of aluminum trihidride – very reactive and, by coincidence, conveniently having almost exactly 75% by weight of aluminum. That coincidence threw me off for quite a while, because that meant
B had to be my carbon source, which made no sense after I eliminated CT
4 from possibilities for
A. Banged my head against the wall for awhile at that one, because I was dead set on AlT
3, with the nice 75% and all, but no,
M just had to have my carbon source. No other way. Trimethyl aluminum was my first thought here but it’s not 75% aluminum by weight - crap. Almost emailed Borek and asserted that there was a typo, 75% couldn't be right. LOL at my ego, thinking a typo is more likely than that I was wrong. Well, I’ll be honest here and admit that at this point I just started to look around on Wikipedia for aluminum compounds that contain carbon. Came up with aluminum carbide – 75% aluminum by weight and, what do you know, reacts with water to give methane and alumina. Bingo. Now does that make me a cheat, or just resourceful? I'll let the chemistry gods decide.
Anyway, that means
M is aluminum carbide, Al
4C
3, and that means B is tritiated water, T
2O. Front half of the problem done.
Back half: I thought originally this would be easy until I realized I know squat about self-radiolysis reactions. I knew
C was CT
4. Decay of one of the tritiums to the light helium knocks 3 g/mol off of CT
4’s weight, which gives
D, conveniently at molar mass of 21. D must therefore be CT
3- or CT
3+. I put aside for the moment which of these two possibilities it is and move to the last reaction: Reaction of
D with water gives an alcohol
E with molar mass of 38 and some hydronium, H
3O
+. Well, methanol is the obvious choice for the alcohol, and tritiated methanol CT
3OH has a mass of 38, so I think this is
E.
D can’t be a carbanion and produce hydronium – if
D was a carbanion and it reacted with water, I surmise it would give a hydroxyl and produce CT
3H, another tritiated methane. No go. Therefore
D must be the short-lived methenium, CT
3+, which should nicely rip off a hydroxyl from water and produce a bunch of extra protons.
So in conclusion:
A = T
2B = T
2O
C = CT
4D = CT
3+E = CT
3OH
M = Al
4C
3Here are the balanced equations:
CT
4 (g) + CuO(s)
Cu (S) + T
2O (l)
6 T
2O (l) + Al
4C
3 (s)
2 Al
2O
3 (s) + 3 CT
4(g)
CT
4 CT
3+ +
3He + e
-CT
3+ + 2H
2O
CT
3OH + H
3O
+Ok.. how’d I do?