I have this particular set of questions in my chemistry textbook problem:
A Large portion of metabolic energy arises from the biological combustion of glucose:
C6H12O6(s) + 6O2(g) -> 6CO2(g) + 6H2O(g)
(a) If this reaction is carried out in an expandable container at 37 degrees Celsius and 780 torr, what volume of CO2 is produced from 20.0 g of glucose and excess oxygen?
(b) If the reaction is carried out at the same conditions with the stoichiometric amount of oxygen, what is the partial pressure of each gas when the reaction is 50% complete (10 g of glucose remains)
For part (a):
I assumed that there should be a remaining amount of the excess oxygen after the reaction, but then there is no given information about the oxygen amount to calculate the partial pressure of the leftover oxygen, so I cannot solve for it to find the partial pressure of carbon dioxide. However, if I used the given pressure, I would get 16.5 Liters, which is also the answer from the textbook. Why is that? Does the expandable container has anything to do with the partial pressure of the two gases?
For part (b):
The stoichiometric amount of oxygen is 2/3 (mol), and the amount of Oxygen reacted is 1/3 (mol). I arrived with 1/3 (mol) for the vapor water and carbon dioxide as well. Then I calculated the molar fraction for the carbon dioxide, vapor water and the remaining oxygen amount that hasn't reacted, which results in a fraction of 1/3 for each gas. This would give the partial pressure of each gas to be (780 torr/3) = 260 torr. The answer from the textbook, however, is 48.8 torr for the vapor water, and 3.7x102 torr for the oxygen and carbon dioxide. Was there a flaw in my calculation or in my assumptions?
Thanks in advance for the help.