Material balance with a reaction (chemical engineering)

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on a chemical engineering homework problem involving the combustion of a propane and butane mixture with pure oxygen. The combustion products contain specific mole percentages of water, carbon dioxide, and oxygen, leading to the need to calculate the mole percent of propane in the fuel. Participants discuss setting up balanced chemical equations for the combustion reactions and emphasize the importance of accounting for excess oxygen in the product calculations. A common mistake noted is the misidentification of butane's chemical formula, which should be C4H10 instead of C4H8. The conversation concludes with a resolution on how to correctly approach the problem to find the mole percent of propane.
MickeyBlue
Messages
25
Reaction score
2

Homework Statement



Felder & Rousseau 4.73 (p. 184)

A mixture of propane and butane is burned with pure oxygen. The combustion products contain 47.4 mole % H2O. After all of the water is removed from the products, the residual gas contains 69.4 mole% CO2 and the balance is O2. What is the mole percent of propane in the fuel?

Homework Equations



1. Let propane = P
2. Choose 100 mol of the reactant fuel as a basis

The Attempt at a Solution


[/B]
Set up 2 balanced equations: 1. C3H8 + 5O2 -> 4H2O + 3CO2
2. C4H8 + 13/2O2 -> 5H2O + 4CO2

I assumed a 100% conversion of the reactant gases. I know O2 is in excess. I drew up a reactant table in terms of mol and set Propane in = P and Butane in= 100-P. I then tried to calculate P by setting the mols of water out divided by the total mols out equal to 0.474.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
So, what's the problem?
 
Hello @MickeyBlue! Welcome to Physics Forums! :smile:

:welcome:

MickeyBlue said:

Homework Statement



Felder & Rousseau 4.73 (p. 184)

A mixture of propane and butane is burned with pure oxygen. The combustion products contain 47.4 mole % H2O. After all of the water is removed from the products, the residual gas contains 69.4 mole% CO2 and the balance is O2. What is the mole percent of propane in the fuel?

Homework Equations



1. Let propane = P
2. Choose 100 mol of the reactant fuel as a basis

The Attempt at a Solution


[/B]
Set up 2 balanced equations: 1. C3H8 + 5O2 -> 4H2O + 3CO2
2. C4H8 + 13/2O2 -> 5H2O + 4CO2

I assumed a 100% conversion of the reactant gases. I know O2 is in excess. I drew up a reactant table in terms of mol and set Propane in = P and Butane in= 100-P. I then tried to calculate P by setting the mols of water out divided by the total mols out equal to 0.474.
So far so good, with one exception:

You wrote that the butane was \mathrm{C_4 H_8}, but I think you meant \mathrm{C_4 H_{10}}. Your equations were balanced correctly though, so I assume that was just a minor mistake typing things into the computer.

As a hint for moving forward, don't forget to include the leftover \mathrm{O_2} in your product. Similar to what you did with P, make up a variable name to indicate the amount of \mathrm{O_2} in there. I used the variable x, but you can use whatever you want.

So your formula, as you have already stated it, should be of this form:

\frac {\mathrm{moles \ of \ H_2O}}{(\mathrm{moles \ of \ H_2O}) + (\mathrm{moles \ of \ CO_2}) + (\mathrm{moles \ of \ O_2})} = 0.474

After that, take out the \mathrm{H_2O} and do something quite similar except with \mathrm{CO_2} in the numerator (and the ratio value being different).

If you do things right, you'll have two equations and two unknowns (P and x). :wink: That's enough to solve for P.
 
Chestermiller said:
So, what's the problem?
My final answer for propane was well above 100 and I couldn't understand why.
 
MickeyBlue said:
My final answer for propane was well above 100 and I couldn't understand why.
Show your work, and perhaps we may be able to point you in the right direction.
 
Oh! Thank you, I see where I went wrong now. Because of how I added mols of O2 consumed I took it as the amount in excess instead. You're right; this should be enough to get P.
 
  • Like
Likes collinsmark
Back
Top