185k views
3 votes
If 20.5 g of NO and 13.8 g of O₂ are used to form NO₂, how many moles of excess reactant will be left over?

1 Answer

1 vote

Answer: The number of moles of excess reactant
O_2 left over will be, 0.089 moles.

Explanation : Given,

Mass of
NO = 20.5 g

Mass of
O_2 = 13.8 g

Molar mass of
NO = 30 g/mol

Molar mass of
O_2 = 32 g/mol

First we have to calculate the moles of
NO and
O_2.


\text{Moles of }NO=\frac{\text{Given mass }NO}{\text{Molar mass }NO}


\text{Moles of }NO=(20.5g)/(30g/mol)=0.683mol

and,


\text{Moles of }O_2=\frac{\text{Given mass }O_2}{\text{Molar mass }O_2}


\text{Moles of }O_2=(13.8g)/(32g/mol)=0.431mol

Now we have to calculate the limiting and excess reagent.

The balanced chemical equation is:


2NO+O_2\rightarrow 2NO_2

From the balanced reaction we conclude that

As, 2 mole of
NO react with 1 mole of
O_2

So, 0.683 moles of
NO react with
(0.683)/(2)=0.342 moles of
O_2

From this we conclude that,
O_2 is an excess reagent because the given moles are greater than the required moles and
NO is a limiting reagent and it limits the formation of product.

Now we have to calculate the moles of excess reactant
O_2 left over.

Number of moles of excess reactant
O_2 left over = Given moles - Required moles

Number of moles of excess reactant
O_2 left over = 0.431 mol - 0.342 mol

Number of moles of excess reactant
O_2 left over = 0.089 mol

Therefore, the number of moles of excess reactant
O_2 left over will be, 0.089 moles.

User Skyy
by
3.8k points