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Topic: Basic Stoichiometry Problem  (Read 4434 times)

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Offline Mr-E

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Basic Stoichiometry Problem
« on: February 02, 2012, 05:39:15 AM »
Desperately need to understand this asap

4.40g of P4O6 and 3.00g of I2 are mixed and allowed to react according to the equation:

5P4O6 + 8I2 ---> 4P2I4 + 3P4O10

Questions
Q: which reactant is in excess and by what mass?

A: P4O6 by 2.78g

I get to the point of knowing the the moles of each but then have no idea about the ratio.

P4O6 moles = .0201
8I2 moles  =  .0118

Someone said to take .0201 divide by 5 then times by 8 = .0321
then .0118 divide by 8 then times by 5 = .0073

0.02                  0.032
0.007                0.0118
excess = 0.007
limiting = 0.0118

I found this extremely confusing. Could someone explain this or help me out with your knowledge. Would be appreciated. Thanks


Offline AWK

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Re: Basic Stoichiometry Problem
« Reply #1 on: February 02, 2012, 06:46:50 AM »
Quote
P4O6 moles = .0201
8I2 moles  =  .0118
change moles into masses and find the reagent in excess (compare to masses of 5P4O6 and 8I2.
AWK

Offline Nisarg Shah

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Re: Basic Stoichiometry Problem
« Reply #2 on: February 06, 2012, 12:47:08 AM »
I'll go along with your question -
4.40g of P4O6 and 3.00g of I2 are mixed and allowed to react according to the equation:

5P4O6 + 8I2 ---> 4P2I4 + 3P4O10

Question
Q: which reactant is in excess and by what mass?

Answer -

P4O6 moles = 0.02
I2 moles  = 0.0118

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Now you can see that their stoichiometric coefficients are 5 and 8 for P4O6 and I2 respectively. Therefore, for every 5 units of P4O6, 8 units of I2 are used.

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Now let us assume that P4O6 is the limiting reagent and is all used up.
So we will now calculate the actual moles of I2 needed to completely react with 0.02 moles of P4O6 by the cross-multiplication method.
 
      5/0.02 = 8/x  (where x is mass of I2 required)
=>   5x = 0.16
=>   x = 0.032 moles
 Since given I2 is only 0.0118 moles, therefore our assumption contradicts.

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This implies that P4O6 is not the limiting reagent but I2 is the limiting reagent.

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 Now let us calculate moles of P4O6 needed to completely react with 0.0118 moles of I2

      5/x = 8/0.0118
=>  8x = 0.059
=>   x = 0.007375 moles

Since less number of moles of P4O6 are required to completely react with 0.0118 moles of I2 than the allotted 0.02 moles, therefore I2 is the limiting reagent and P4O6 is in excess.

---------------------------------------------------------------

Since only 0.007375 moles of P4O6 reacted, (0.02-0.007375 = 0.012625) moles remained unreacted.

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Multiplying 0.012625 by 220 (molecular mass of P4O6), we get 2.7775g, which is the required answer.

Hope you understood it. Limiting reagents was my strong topic.

Offline Borek

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Re: Basic Stoichiometry Problem
« Reply #3 on: February 06, 2012, 04:19:19 AM »
Answer -

Please read forum rules:

Don't give the final answers, let students solve questions on their own.
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Offline Nisarg Shah

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Re: Basic Stoichiometry Problem
« Reply #4 on: February 06, 2012, 11:42:25 PM »
Answer -

Please read forum rules:

Don't give the final answers, let students solve questions on their own.
Will keep that in mind :)

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