Chemistry 10th Edition

Published by Brooks/Cole Publishing Co.
ISBN 10: 1133610668
ISBN 13: 978-1-13361-066-3

Chapter 2 - Chemical Formulas and Composition Stoichiometrhy - Exercises - Composition Stoichiometry - Page 76: 59

Answer

The simplest formula of cocaine is $C_{17}H_{21}NO_{4}$.

Work Step by Step

Recall that the definition of percent composition by mass is the mass of a component divided by the mass of the entire system. Therefore, in a 100 g sample of cocaine, there is 67.30 g of C, 6.930 g of H, 21.15 g of O, and 4.62 g of N. Now let's calculate the number of moles of each element in the sample. $ n(C)=\frac{m(C)}{M(C)}=\frac{67.30}{12.01}$ mol $= 5.604 $ mol $ n(H)=\frac{m(H)}{M(H)}=\frac{6.930}{1.008}$ mol $= 6.875 $ mol $ n(O)=\frac{m(O)}{M(O)}=\frac{21.15}{16.00}$ mol $= 1.322 $ mol $ n(N)=\frac{m(N)}{M(N)}=\frac{4.62}{14.01}$ mol $= 0.330 $ mol The next step is to divide those numbers by the smallest one of them and round the results to whole numbers. $N(C)=\frac{n(C)}{n(N)}=17$ $N(H)=\frac{n(H)}{n(N)}=21$ $N(O)=\frac{n(O)}{n(N)}=4$ $N(N)=\frac{n(N)}{n(N)}=1$ The simplest formula of cocaine is $C_{17}H_{21}NO_{4}$.
Update this answer!

You can help us out by revising, improving and updating this answer.

Update this answer

After you claim an answer you’ll have 24 hours to send in a draft. An editor will review the submission and either publish your submission or provide feedback.