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4 votes
A 55.0g sample of iron (III) filings is reacted with 23.8g of powdered sulfur (S8). How much iron (III) sulfide in moles would be produced in this reaction?

Equation:

Convert to moles
of iron:

Convert to moles
of sulfur:

Calculate the
limiting reagent:

Solve the problem:

2 Answers

6 votes

Answer:

0.74 moles iron (III) sulfide

Step-by-step explanation:

From the balanced equation of reaction:


Fe + S --> FeS

1 mole of Fe reacts with 1 mole of S to give 1 mole of FeS.

moles =
(mass)/(molar mass)

mole of Fe = 55/55.8 = 0.99 moles

mole of S = 23.8/32.07 = 0.74 moles

Sulfur is limited in quantity and will therefore determine the rate of reaction.

1 mole of sulfur gives 1 mole of FeS

0.74 moles of sulfur will therefore give 0.74 moles of FeS.

0.74 moles iron (III) sulfide will be produced.

User Codium
by
8.3k points
3 votes

Answer:

0.744 mol

Step-by-step explanation:

the balanced equation for the reaction is

8Fe + S₈ ---> 8FeS

molar ratio of Fe to S₈ is 8:1

number of moles of Fe - 55.0 g / 56 g/mol = 0.98 mol

number of moles of S - 23.8 g / 256 g/mol = 0.093 mol

if we are to assume that S₈ is the limiting reactant

if 1 mol of S₈ reacts with 8 mol of Fe

then 0.093 mol of S₈ reacts with - 8 x 0.093 mol = 0.744 mol of Fe

however there's 0.98 mol of Fe present but only 0.744 mol of Fe is needed

therefore Fe is in excess and S₈ is the limiting reagent

molar ratio of S₈ to FeS is 1:8

then 0.093 mol of S₈ reacts with - 8 x 0.093 = 0.744 mol of FeS

number of FeS moles produced is 0.744 mol

User NicJ
by
8.1k points
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