- #1
carmen77
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Conceptual--Combustion of a sample
When a sample is burned in a combustion train, the percent oxygen in the sample cannot be determined directly from the mass of water and carbon dioxide. Why?
I'm working through my chemistry book solo and I'm almost done with chapter 2! However, I got to this question and it was something I wondered about when I was previously working "determination of simplest and molcular formula" problems. Because I would first find the mass of C in CO2 and then the mass of H in H2O, then subtract it from the mass of the sample that was combusted, and I didn't understand why I couldn't also compute the masses of oyxgen and just add them together, instead of going the other route, but the book worked it the other way so I didn't bother. If anyone can lead me to the answer or outright tell me that would be nice!
Homework Statement
When a sample is burned in a combustion train, the percent oxygen in the sample cannot be determined directly from the mass of water and carbon dioxide. Why?
Homework Equations
The Attempt at a Solution
I'm working through my chemistry book solo and I'm almost done with chapter 2! However, I got to this question and it was something I wondered about when I was previously working "determination of simplest and molcular formula" problems. Because I would first find the mass of C in CO2 and then the mass of H in H2O, then subtract it from the mass of the sample that was combusted, and I didn't understand why I couldn't also compute the masses of oyxgen and just add them together, instead of going the other route, but the book worked it the other way so I didn't bother. If anyone can lead me to the answer or outright tell me that would be nice!