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If 155 grams of potassium (K) reacts with 122 grams of potassium nitrate (KNO3), what is the limiting reagent? 2KNO3 + 10K 6K2O + N2

User Evedovelli
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2 Answers

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K = 39 g/mol
KNO3 = 101 g/mol

2 KNO3 + 10 K = 6 K2O + N2

2 x 101 g KNO3 ---------- 10 x 39 g K
122 g KNO3 -------------- ??

122 x 10 x 39 / 2 x 101 =

47580 / 202 => 235.54 g of K

( KNO3 is Excess reagent )

2 x 101 g KNO3 ---------- 10 x 39 g K
?? --------------------------- 155 g K

155 x 2 x 101 / 10 x 39 =

31310 / 390 => 80.28 g of KNO3 ( K is limiting reagent )

hope this helps!

User Starchand
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4 votes

Answer : The limiting reagent is, potassium

Explanation : Given,

Mass of potassium = 155 g

Mass of potassium nitrate = 122 g

Molar mass of potassium = 39 g/mole

Molar mass of potassium nitrate = 101 g/mole

First we have to calculate the moles of
K and
KNO_3.


\text{Moles of }K=\frac{\text{Mass of }K}{\text{Molar mass of }K}=(155g)/(39g/mole)=3.97moles


\text{Moles of }KNO_3=\frac{\text{Mass of }KNO_3}{\text{Molar mass of }KNO_3}=(122g)/(101g/mole)=1.21moles

Now we have to calculate the limiting and excess reagent.

The balanced chemical reaction is,


2KNO_3+10K\rightarrow 6K_2O+N_2

From the balanced reaction we conclude that

As, 2 moles of
KNO_3 react with 10 mole of
K

So, 1.21 moles of
KNO_3 react with
(10)/(2)* 1.21=6.05 moles of
K

That means, in the given balanced reaction,
K is a limiting reagent because it limits the formation of products and
KNO_3 is an excess reagent.

Hence, the potassium is the limiting reagent.

User Dubbs
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8.2k points
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