Chemistry, asked by TheDang, 4 months ago

Calculate the maximum amount of sodium chloride that can be produced when 10 g of sodium is reacted with 14 g of chlorine.

Answers

Answered by spp2786
1

Answer:

Explanation:

You know that

2

Na

(

s

)

+

Cl

2

(

g

)

2

NaCl

(

s

)

and that the reaction produced  

234 g

of sodium chloride. Convert this to moles by using the compound's molar mass

234

g

1 mole NaCl

58.44

g

=

4.004 moles NaCl

Now, you know that the sample of sodium metal reacted completely, which implies that it was completely consumed by the reaction.

In other words, you don't have to worry about the sample of chlorine gas because the fact that sample of sodium metal was completely consumed lets you know that the chlorine gas is not a limiting reagent.

This means that the reaction consumed

4.004

moles NaCl

2 moles Na

2

moles NaCl

=

4.004 moles Na

Convert this to grams by using the element's molar mass

4.004

moles Na

22.99 g

1

mole Na

=

92.1 g

−−−−−

 

The answer is rounded to three sig figs.

SIDE NOTE You can show that chlorine gas is not the limiting reagent by calculating the number of moles present in the sample

0.142

kg

1 mole Cl

2

35.453

kg

=

4.005 moles Cl

2

In order to produce  

4.004

moles of sodium chloride, you only need

4.004

moles NaCl

1 mole Cl

2

2

moles NaCl

=

2.002 moles Cl

2

Explanation:

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