Chemistry, 05.12.2019 17:31, natalieagustinlop54
The standard heat of the combustion reaction of liquid n-hexane to form co2(g) and h2o(l), with all reactants and products at 77°f and 1 atm, is δhr°=−1.791×106 btu. the heat of vaporization of hexane at 77°f is 13,550 btu/lb-mole and that of water is 18,934 btu/lb-mole.
(a) is the reaction exothermic or endothermic at 77°f? would you have to heat or cool the reactor to keep the temperature constant? what would the temperature do if the reactor ran adiabatically? what can you infer about the energy required to break the molecular bonds of the reactants and that released when the product bonds form?
(b) use the given data to calculate δhr° (btu) for the combustion of n-hexane vapor to form co2(g) and h2o(g).
(c) if q˙=δh˙, at what rate in btu/s is heat absorbed or released (state which) if 120 lbm/s of o2 is consumed in the combustion of hexane vapor, water vapor is the product, and the reactants and products are all at 77°f?
(d) if the reaction were carried out in a real reactor, the actual value of q˙ would be greater (less negative) than the value calculated in part c. explain why.
Answers: 3
Chemistry, 22.06.2019 09:00, tashaunalewis4786
This chart lists four kinds of polymers and their sources. what can be known about all four polymers, despite their differences? they come from living things. they share ionic carbon bonds. they are at least 100 monomers long. they are made of repeating subunits.
Answers: 1
Chemistry, 23.06.2019 04:40, yayamcneal05
[01.07]what is the answer to the problem: 101 g + 25.01 g + 5.05 g? 131.06 g 131.1 g 131 g 130 g
Answers: 1
The standard heat of the combustion reaction of liquid n-hexane to form co2(g) and h2o(l), with all...
Mathematics, 14.05.2021 21:30
Mathematics, 14.05.2021 21:30
Mathematics, 14.05.2021 21:30
Physics, 14.05.2021 21:30
History, 14.05.2021 21:30
Mathematics, 14.05.2021 21:30