3.6k views
2 votes
If 3.0 g of NH3 reacts with 5.0 g of HCl, what is the limiting reactant?

User Cmill
by
7.2k points

1 Answer

2 votes

Answer:HCl

Step-by-step explanation:


\text{number of moles}=\frac{\text{given mass}}{\text{molar mass}}

For
NH_(3),


\text{given mass}=3g


\text{molar mass}=14+3=17g


n_{NH_(3)}=(3)/(17)=0.176

For
HCl,


\text{given mass}=5g


\text{molar mass}=1+35.5=36.5g


n_(HCl)=(5)/(36.5)=0.136

The reaction between
NH_(3) and
HCl is


NH_(3)+HCl
NH_(4)Cl

So,one mole of
NH_(3) requires one mole of
HCl


0.176 moles of
NH_(3) requires
0.176 moles of
HCl

But there are only
0.136 moles of
HCl available.


HCl will be consumed first.

So,
HCl is the limiting reagent.

User Mewel
by
8.7k points

Related questions

1 answer
2 votes
218k views