Chemical formula and thoretical/percent yield.

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The discussion centers on the reaction between copper bromide (CuBr) and concentrated nitric acid (HNO3), which produces copper oxide (CuO) after heating. The formation of CuO, weighing 0.93g, is attributed to the decomposition of copper nitrate generated in the initial reaction. Participants are focused on deriving the correct chemical equations for the reactions involved. Initial attempts at writing the equations indicate uncertainty about balancing them and whether to use copper (I) or copper (II) bromide. It is suggested that nitric acid, being highly concentrated, likely reduces to nitrogen dioxide (NO2) during the reaction, impacting stoichiometry. The discussion emphasizes the importance of accurately modeling the initial reaction to determine theoretical and percent yields.
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2 ml of 15M Nitric acid was added to copper bromide(CuBr) and gently heated until a black substance was formed, copper oxide(CuO), and was completely dry. There was .93g of CuO formed in the reaction. The CuO was formed from the decomposition of the copper nitrate produced by the reaction of ntitric acid with copper bromide.

I have to find the chemical formula and calculate the theoretical and percent yields.

I'm having trouble writing the chemical formula...So far i have
CuBr + HNO3 ----> CuNO3 + Br2 + H2
(I know its not balanced yet but i want to know if its right before i balance it)

and

CuNO3 + HNO3 ----> CuO + N2
(This also isn't balanced)


Do i have to combine these formulas to find a formula that models the reaction? If so, how do I do that?
 
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Are you sure you start with copper (I) bromide, and not with copper (II) bromide? If the copper is oxidized yield will be unpredictable, as nitric acid can be reduced to both NO2 and NO during reaction, thus stoichiometry will be dubious.
 
im fairly confident that it is copper (I) bromide
 
Nitric acid is highly concentrated so you may assume that it is reduced to NO2 when dissolving CuBr. First step will be to priduce copper (II) nitratne, second will be decomposition to CuO. Note that in the second step reaction equation is not as important as in the first step.
 
thanks for the help :)
 
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