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During the chemical reaction given below 21.71 grams of each reagent were allowed to react. Determine how many grams of the excess reagent are left over after the reaction is complete. 2SO2()+O2()⟶2SO3()

User Breezeight
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1 Answer

3 votes

Answer: 16.32 g of
O_2 as excess reagent are left.

Step-by-step explanation:

To calculate the moles :


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


\text{Moles of} SO_2=(21.71g)/(64g/mol)=0.34mol


\text{Moles of} O_2=(21.71g)/(32g/mol)=0.68mol


2SO_2(g)+O_2(g)\rightarrow 2SO_3(g)

According to stoichiometry :

2 moles of
SO_2 require = 1 mole of
O_2

Thus 0.34 moles of
SO_2 will require=
(1)/(2)* 0.34=0.17moles of
O_2

Thus
SO_2 is the limiting reagent as it limits the formation of product and
O_2 is the excess reagent.

Moles of
O_2 left = (0.68-0.17) mol = 0.51 mol

Mass of
O_2=moles* {\text {Molar mass}}=0.51moles* 32g/mol=16.32g

Thus 16.32 g of
O_2 as excess reagent are left.

User Ivan Durst
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