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Methane (CH4), ammonia (NH3), and oxygen (O2) can react to form hydrogen cyanide (HCN) and water according to this equation:

CH4+NH3+O2→HCN+H2O. A student has 8 g of methane and 10 g of ammonia in excess oxygen.

a. What is the balanced equation for this reaction?
b. Which reagent is limiting? Explain why.
c. How many grams of hydrogen cyanide will be formed?

1 Answer

9 votes

Answer: a.
2CH_4+2NH_3+3O_2\rightarrow 2HCN+6H_2O(g)

b.
CH_4 is the limiting.

c. 13.5 g of hydrogen cyanide will be formed

Step-by-step explanation:

To calculate the moles :


\text{Moles of solute}=\frac{\text{given mass}}{\text{Molar Mass}}


\text{Moles of methane}=(8g)/(16g/mol)=0.50moles


\text{Moles of ammonia}=(10g)/(17g/mol)=0.59moles

The balanced reaction will be :


2CH_4+2NH_3+3O_2\rightarrow 2HCN+6H_2O(g)

According to stoichiometry :

2 moles of
CH_4 require = 2 moles of
NH_3

Thus 0.5 moles of
CH_4 will require=
(2)/(2)* 0.5=0.5moles of
NH_3

Thus
CH_4 is the limiting reagent as it limits the formation of product and
NH_3 is the excess reagent as it is present in more amount than required.

As 2 moles of
CH_4 give = 2 moles of
HCN

Thus 0.5 moles of
CH_4 give =
(2)/(2)* 0.5=0.5moles of
HCN

Mass of
HCN=moles* {\text {Molar mass}}=0.5moles* 27g/mol=13.5g

Thus 13.5 g of
HCN will be produced from the given masses of both reactants.

User Khon Lieu
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