The decomposition of nitroglycerin produces carbon dioxide, nitrogen, water and oxygen gases.
a. write a balanced equation
2C3H5N3O9---> 12CO2 + 6N2+ 10H20 + O2
I got that part right, not that difficult
b. If the decomposition of nitroglycerin releases 6.23kj/g of energy in the form of heat, what is the standard molar enthalpy of formation for nitroglycerin?
now for part b, my understanding of standard molar enthalpy of formation is the amount of energy evolved or absorbed in order to create one mol of a stable and pure substance from its component compounds. I have no idea how to figure this out though, I've tried doing this
1g(1mol/227.0872g)(1mol-rxn/1mol)(x)= -6.23kj
227.0872 is the MM of nitroglycerin
that method did not work, so I tried (227.0872g/1mol)(6.23kj/1g)=-1414.75kj/mol
that is the wrong answer as well. Can anybody point me in the right direction, the correct answer is -3.7Xto^2kj/mol.