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LIMITING REACTIONS INB PAGE 43. ESSENTIAL QUESTION: Why is the limiting reactant not always the reactant with fewer moles?

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Presentation on theme: "LIMITING REACTIONS INB PAGE 43. ESSENTIAL QUESTION: Why is the limiting reactant not always the reactant with fewer moles?"— Presentation transcript:

1 LIMITING REACTIONS INB PAGE 43

2 ESSENTIAL QUESTION: Why is the limiting reactant not always the reactant with fewer moles?

3 LIMITING REACTIONS Limiting reactant: The reactant that limits how much of the product can be produced. Excess reactant: The substance that is not completely used up in the reaction.

4 EXAMPLE PROBLEM If 6.0 mol of HF is added to 4.5 mol of SiO2, which is the limiting reactant?

5 1) N 2 H 4 + H 2 O 2 => N 2 + H 2 O A) What is the limiting reactant when.750 mol of N 2 H 4 is mixed with 0.500 mol of H 2 O 2 ? B) How much of the excess reactant remains unreacted? C) How much of each product is produced?

6 2) Fe + H 2 O => Fe 3 O 4 + H 2 A) When 36.0 g H 2 O is mixed with 67.0 g Fe, Which is the limiting reactant? B) What is the mass of iron oxide produced? C) What mass of the excess reactant remains when the reaction is complete?

7 PERCENT YIELD Theoretical Yield: The maximum amount of product that can be produced. Actual yield: The amount of product obtained from the reaction. Percent Yield: Actual Yield_ X 100 Theoretical Yield

8 Example: C 6 H 6 + Cl 2 => C 6 H 5 + HCl What is the theoretical yield(g)? If the actual yield is 38.8g, what is the percent yield of C 6 H 5 ?


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