Mole Fraction of O2 to Mass of O2

AI Thread Summary
To calculate the mass of oxygen in a 6m x 6m x 6m enclosure at standard temperature and pressure, start by determining the total volume in liters, which is 216,000 liters. Using the ideal gas law, find the number of moles of gas by dividing this volume by 22.4 liters per mole. Then, apply the mole fractions of oxygen (0.21 and 0.158) to calculate the moles of oxygen present. Finally, convert the moles of oxygen to mass by multiplying by the molar mass of oxygen, which is 32 grams per mole. This approach will yield the resulting mass of oxygen in the enclosure.
sirchicken
Messages
2
Reaction score
0
Hi Everyone,

I am trying to calculate the mass of oxygen and keep running into dead ends and was wondering if anyone could offer any insight.

I am trying to find the resulting mass of oxygen in a 6m x 6m x 6m enclosure at standard temperature and pressure when the mole fraction of oxygen is reduced from 0.21 to 0.158. Can anybody offer any advice?

Thanks!
 
Chemistry news on Phys.org
What is your specific application, i.e. what is it you are trying to accomplish?

Anyway, I would start by calculating the mass as if the mole fraction were 100%, and use the ideal gas law to calculate how many moles of oxygen would be in the container.

p.s. welcome to PF.
 
I am trying to find out what the mass of the oxygen in the enclosure will be if the mole fraction of oxygen from 0.21 to 0.158.

I am assuming that at stp the mole fraction of oxygen is equal to 0.21 and the mole fraction of nitrogen is 0.79. Then a fire is introduced and reduces the mole fraction of oxygen to 75% of its ambient value. I am trying to calculate the resulting mass of oxygen in the enclosure so that I can determine how long the fire can burn.

Thanks!
 
Okay. Not sure why you want to test this at 32 °F / 0 °C (that's what standard temperature is), rather than at room temperature, but you know more about what you are trying to do than I.

At standard temperature and pressure, 1 mole of an ideal gas occupies 22.4 liters.
You can use google to figure out how many 22.4-liter volumes would be contained in a 6x6x6 m^3 space; just go to google and enter
(6*6*6 m^3) / (22.4 liters)​
That will tell you how many moles of gas molecules (of all kinds) are in the 6x6x6 m3 space.

Multiply the number of moles of gas by the fraction that is oxygen, i.e. 0.21 or 0.158, to get the number of moles of oxygen.

Multiply the number of moles of oxygen by the grams-per-mole for oxygen -- that would be 32 -- and you'll have the mass in grams of oxygen that is in the container.
 
It seems like a simple enough question: what is the solubility of epsom salt in water at 20°C? A graph or table showing how it varies with temperature would be a bonus. But upon searching the internet I have been unable to determine this with confidence. Wikipedia gives the value of 113g/100ml. But other sources disagree and I can't find a definitive source for the information. I even asked chatgpt but it couldn't be sure either. I thought, naively, that this would be easy to look up without...
I was introduced to the Octet Rule recently and make me wonder, why does 8 valence electrons or a full p orbital always make an element inert? What is so special with a full p orbital? Like take Calcium for an example, its outer orbital is filled but its only the s orbital thats filled so its still reactive not so much as the Alkaline metals but still pretty reactive. Can someone explain it to me? Thanks!!
Back
Top