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When calcium carbonate is added to hydrochloric acid, calcium chloride, carbon dioxide, and water are produced.

CaCO3 + 2HCl ⟶CaCl2 + H2O + CO2

A) How many grams of calcium chloride will be produced when 26.0g of calcium carbonate are combined whith 12.0g of hydrochloric acid?
B) Which reactant is in excess and how many grams of this reactant will remain after the reaction is complete?

User Ropez
by
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1 Answer

4 votes

Answer: a) 18.3 grams

b)
CaCO_3 is the excess reagent and 16.5g of
CaCO_3 will remain after the reaction is complete.

Step-by-step explanation:


CaCO_3+2HCl\rightarrow CaCl_2+H_2O+CO_2


\text{Number of moles}=\frac{\text{Given mass}}{\text{Molar mass}}


\text{Number of moles of calcium carbonate}=(26g)/(100g/mol)=0.26moles


\text{Number of moles of hydrochloric acid}=(12g)/(36.5g/mol)=0.33moles

According to stoichiometry:

2 mole of
HCl react with 1 mole of
CaCO_3

0.33 moles of
HCl will react with=
(1)/(2)* 0.33=0.165moles of
CaCO_3

Thus
HCl is the limiting reagent as it limits the formation of product and
CaCO_3 is the excess reagent.

2 moles of
HCl produce = 1 mole of
CaCl_2

0.33 moles of
HCl produce=
(1)/(2)* 0.33=0.165moles of
CaCl_2

Mass of
CaCl_2=moles* {\text{Molar Mass}}=0.165* 111=18.3g

As 0.165 moles of
CaCO_3 are used and (0.33-0.165)=0.165 moles of
CaCO_3 are left unused.

Mass of
CaCO_3 left unreacted =
moles* {\text {Molar mass}}=0.165* 100=16.5g

Thus 18.3 g of
CaCl_2 are produced.
CaCO_3 is the excess reagent and 16.5g of
CaCO_3 will remain after the reaction is complete.

User CampbellMG
by
6.5k points