Chemistry, asked by aishwarya1742, 11 months ago

How to find a limiting reagent and a excess reagent in a given chemical equation?​

Answers

Answered by poonam05
2

Answer:

Hey mate here's your answer...

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Explanation:

Find the limiting reagent by looking at the number of moles of each reactant.

  • Determine the balanced chemical equation for the chemical reaction.
  • Convert all given information into moles (most likely, through the use of molar mass as a conversion factor).
  • Calculate the mole ratio from the given information.
Answered by phenomenalguy
1

\huge\mathfrak{Hello}

answer❣️❣️

  • In any chemical reaction, you can simply pick one reagent as a candidate for the limiting reagent, calculate how many moles of that reagent you have, and then calculate how many grams of the other reagent you’d need to react both to completion. You’ll discover one of two things. Either you have an excess of the first reagent, or you have an excess of the second reagent. The one you have in excess is the excess reagent. The one that isn’t in excess is the limiting reagent.......❣️❣️❣️

\huge\mathfrak{Hope\: this\: help}

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