Chemistry, asked by saraan1218, 4 months ago

give one example of limiting and non limiting reactants​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
2

Answer:

If more than 6 moles of O2 are available per mole of C6H12O6, the oxygen is in excess and glucose is the limiting reactant. If less than 6 moles of oxygen are available per mole of glucose, oxygen is the limiting reactant. The ratio is 6 mole oxygen per 1 mole glucose, OR 1 mole oxygen per 1/6 mole glucose.

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Answered by scienceworm1
1

Limiting Reagent: In a chemical reaction limiting reagent is the reactant that is consumed first and prevents any further reaction from occurring. The amount of product formed during the reaction is determined by the limiting reagent. For example, let us consider the reaction of solution and chlorine. 2Na+Cl2→2NaCl.

The reaction will stop when all of the limiting reactant is consumed. Likewise with chemistry, if there is only a certain amount of one reactant available for a reaction, the reaction must stop when that reactant is consumed whether or not the other reactant has been used up.

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