How many grams of bromine will be required to completely react with 10 g of propyne?
(C = 12, H = 1, Br = 80)
20 g
40 g
60 g
80 g
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Discussions (16)

This can't be the answer. When ethyne reacts completly with bromine(addition reaction), it doesn't produce hydrogen. The equation ought to be
C3H4+Br2-C3H4Br2
(36+4)(80*2)
40g of ethyne reacts with 160g of bromine
10g of ethyne reacts with xg of bromine
40/10=160/x
10*160=40*x
1600/40=x
x=40g. optionB

The chemical equation for the reaction between propyne (C₃H₄) and bromine (Br₂) is:
C₃H₄ + 2Br₂ → C₃H₄Br₄
Molar mass of propyne (C₃H₄) = 3(12) + 4(1) = 36 + 4 = 40 g/mol
Number of moles of propyne = mass of propyne / molar mass of propyne
= 10 g / 40 g/mol
= 0.25 mol
From the balanced equation, we see that 1 mole of propyne requires 2 moles of bromine.
Number of moles of bromine required = 2 × number of moles of propyne
= 2 × 0.25 mol
= 0.5 mol
Molar mass of bromine (Br₂) = 2(80) = 160 g/mol
Mass of bromine required = number of moles of bromine × molar mass of bromine
= 0.5 mol × 160 g/mol
= 80 g
The correct answer is:
D. 80 g

d ansa is correct....80g..... it is jst dat in d reaction d product was not properly written

Pls can u explain where d hydrogen came 4rm and d carbon attached to bromine

de answer d is not correct
some students might think it is correct those that got de correct answer will now choose de wrong answer due to de answer dere is d but de correct answer is b okay

The balanced chemical equation for the reaction of propyne (C3H4) with bromine (Br2) is:
C3H4 + Br2 -> C3H4Br2
From the equation, we can see that 1 mole of propyne reacts with 1 mole of bromine to produce 1 mole of 1,2-dibromopropane. The molar mass of propyne is:
3(12.01 g/mol) + 4(1.01 g/mol) = 40.04 g/mol
So, 10 g of propyne is equal to:
10 g / 40.04 g/mol = 0.2498 mol
According to the balanced equation, 1 mole of propyne reacts with 1 mole of bromine. Therefore, 0.2498 mol of bromine is required to react with 0.2498 mol of propyne. The molar mass of bromine is 2(79.90 g/mol) = 159.80 g/mol. Thus, the mass of bromine required is:
0.2498 mol x 159.80 g/mol = 39.96 g
Therefore, the answer is approximately 40 g of bromine (option B).


