Is the water produced in the burning of a candle in this gaseous or liquid phase
ID: 878498 • Letter: I
Question
Is the water produced in the burning of a candle in this gaseous or liquid phase? What evidence do you have for your answer?B). Suppose that the carbon dioxide does not dissolve, but remains in the gas phase. How high should the water column rise, if the water produced is actually in the liquid phase? Is the water produced in the burning of a candle in this gaseous or liquid phase? What evidence do you have for your answer?
B). Suppose that the carbon dioxide does not dissolve, but remains in the gas phase. How high should the water column rise, if the water produced is actually in the liquid phase? B). Suppose that the carbon dioxide does not dissolve, but remains in the gas phase. How high should the water column rise, if the water produced is actually in the liquid phase?
Explanation / Answer
This question seems a postlaboratory question:
Normally in combustions of paraffin (linear alkanes) water is produced as steam (gas), this can be proved with a mirror or glass near the flame, steam will condensate in the mirror.
B) To answer this, it is necessary to know the experiment. I guess is related with ideal gas law.
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