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Labeling of Oleum & % Free SO3

CHEMCA | Labeling of Oleum & % Free SO3

Master Oleum Labeling & % Free SO3

Learn the exact meaning of Oleum percentage labeling, stoichiometric calculations, and how to instantly find the % free SO3 with Abhishek Sengar.

Video Chapters

Quick Theory & Cheat Sheet

What is Oleum?

Oleum (H2S2O7) is essentially a mixture of Sulfuric Acid (H2SO4) and free Sulfur Trioxide (SO3). It is formed during the Contact Process by dissolving SO3 into H2SO4.

The Core Reaction

SO3 + H2O → H2SO4

  • 1 mole of SO3 (80g) reacts with 1 mole of H2O (18g).
  • Mass ratio: 80g of SO3 requires 18g of H2O.

Decoding the Label (e.g., 104.5%)

A label of 104.5% means that if you take 100g of this Oleum sample and add water, you will get exactly 104.5g of pure H2SO4.

The extra 4.5g is the mass of the Water (H2O) added, which reacted entirely with the free SO3 present in the 100g sample.

Calculation Formula

Mass of H2O added = (Label % - 100)g

Mass of free SO3 = Mass of H2O × (80 / 18)

% Free SO3 = (Mass of free SO3 / 100g) × 100

Video Challenge Quiz

Test what you learned from the end of the video!

What will be the % Free SO3 in a sample of Oleum labeled as 113.5%?

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