8.2k views
4 votes
g Aqueous hydrochloric acid will react with solid sodium hydroxide to produce aqueous sodium chloride and liquid water . Suppose 20. g of hydrochloric acid is mixed with 16.3 g of sodium hydroxide. Calculate the minimum mass of hydrochloric acid that could be left over by the chemical reaction. Be sure your answer has the correct number of significant digits.

User Thoroughly
by
4.9k points

1 Answer

2 votes

Answer: 5.1 gram

Step-by-step explanation:

To calculate the moles :


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


\text{Moles of} HCl=(20g)/(36.5g/mol)=0.55moles


\text{Moles of} NaOH=(16.3g)/(40g/mol)=0.41moles


HCl(aq)+NaOH(s)\rightarrow NaCl(aq)+H_2O(l)

According to stoichiometry :

1 mole of
NaOH require = 1 mole of

Thus 0.41 moles of
NaOH will require=
(1)/(1)* 0.41=0.41moles of

Thus
NaOH is the limiting reagent as it limits the formation of product and
HCL is the excess reagent.

Moles of HCl left = (0.55-0.41) = 0.14

Mass of
HCl left =
moles* {\text {Molar mass}}=0.14moles* 36.5g/mol=5.1g

Thus 5.1 g of hydrochloric acid could be left over by the chemical reaction.

User Alesss
by
4.3k points