I see thanks Borek.
So using those equations I worked things out:
CaCO3 + 2HCl
CaCl2 + H2O + CO2
PV = nRT
120 x 8.04 = n x 8.314 x 290
n(CO2) = 0.4
Using stoichiometry n(HCl) used in this equation is 0.8
Then to find n(HCl) used in this equation
CaO + 2HCl
CaCl2 + H2O
I wrote mass of original mixture = 0.4 x 100.09 + w x 56.08
where w = mol of CaO
mass of CaCl2 = (w + 0.4) x 110.17
Then I can write an equation
1.5061 x (0.4 x 100.09 + w x 56.08) = (w + 0.4) x 110.17
w = 0.631323
So therefore the n(HCl) used in the second equation is 1.262646 and adding the 0.8 from the first equation gives me 2.0626 mol of HCl. This means in a 1 M there will be 2.0626 L of water. Then since density = 1.02.
mass of water/2062.6 = 1.02
mass of water = 2103.90
The answer is still wrong but I think the answer lies in Rutherford who replied to the original post. He wrote:
"and that the mass share is 3.5784% (4 digits). So:
73g:x=3.5784%:(100-3.5784)%, x=1967.02g of water."
Could someone explain this?
Thanks