Chemistry, asked by Anonymous, 2 months ago

1) If the entire quantity of all the
reactants is not consumed in the reaction
which is the limiting reagent?​

Answers

Answered by Anisha5119
8

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reactant that is entirely consumed when a reaction goes to completion is known as limiting reactant.

reactant that is entirely consumed when a reaction goes to completion is known as limiting reactant.The amount of reactant limits the amount of product formed.

reactant that is entirely consumed when a reaction goes to completion is known as limiting reactant.The amount of reactant limits the amount of product formed.For example, consider the reaction: C+O

reactant that is entirely consumed when a reaction goes to completion is known as limiting reactant.The amount of reactant limits the amount of product formed.For example, consider the reaction: C+O 2

reactant that is entirely consumed when a reaction goes to completion is known as limiting reactant.The amount of reactant limits the amount of product formed.For example, consider the reaction: C+O 2

reactant that is entirely consumed when a reaction goes to completion is known as limiting reactant.The amount of reactant limits the amount of product formed.For example, consider the reaction: C+O 2 →CO

reactant that is entirely consumed when a reaction goes to completion is known as limiting reactant.The amount of reactant limits the amount of product formed.For example, consider the reaction: C+O 2 →CO 2

reactant that is entirely consumed when a reaction goes to completion is known as limiting reactant.The amount of reactant limits the amount of product formed.For example, consider the reaction: C+O 2 →CO 2

reactant that is entirely consumed when a reaction goes to completion is known as limiting reactant.The amount of reactant limits the amount of product formed.For example, consider the reaction: C+O 2 →CO 2

reactant that is entirely consumed when a reaction goes to completion is known as limiting reactant.The amount of reactant limits the amount of product formed.For example, consider the reaction: C+O 2 →CO 2 If 1 mole of C and 2 moles of oxygen are present, then C is the limiting reagent and oxygen is the excess reagent.

reactant that is entirely consumed when a reaction goes to completion is known as limiting reactant.The amount of reactant limits the amount of product formed.For example, consider the reaction: C+O 2 →CO 2 If 1 mole of C and 2 moles of oxygen are present, then C is the limiting reagent and oxygen is the excess reagent. The amount of product formed is 1 mole and not 2 moles.

reactant that is entirely consumed when a reaction goes to completion is known as limiting reactant.The amount of reactant limits the amount of product formed.For example, consider the reaction: C+O 2 →CO 2 If 1 mole of C and 2 moles of oxygen are present, then C is the limiting reagent and oxygen is the excess reagent. The amount of product formed is 1 mole and not 2 moles.Hence, both assertion and reason are correct and reason is the correct explanation for assertion.

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Answered by adarshdev73
1

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