Chemistry, asked by ahmadhayatsp01, 7 months ago

how will you identify limiting reagent in a reaction

Answers

Answered by ruqayyak
2

Explanation:

Limiting reagents are the substances that are completely consumed in the completion of a chemical reaction. They are also referred to as limiting agents or limiting reactants.

According to the stoichiometry of chemical reactions, a fixed amount of reactants are required for the completion of the reaction.

Let us consider the following reaction of formation of ammonia:

3H2 + N2 → 2NH3

In the reaction given above, 3 moles of Hydrogen gas are required to react with 1 mole of nitrogen gas to form 2 moles of ammonia. But what if, during the reaction, only 2 moles of hydrogen gas are available along with 1 mole of nitrogen.

In that case, the entire quantity of nitrogen cannot be used (because the entirety of nitrogen requires 3 moles of hydrogen gas to react). Hence, the hydrogen gas is limiting the reaction and is therefore called the limiting reagent for this reaction.

Answered by Anonymous
5

Answer:

Limiting Reagents

limiting reagentThe reactant in a chemical reaction that is consumed first; prevents any further reaction from occurring.

In a chemical reaction, the limiting reagent, or limiting reactant, is the substance that has been completely consumed when the chemical reaction is complete. The amount of product produced by the reaction is limited by this reactant because the reaction cannot proceed further without it; often, other reagents are present excess of the quantities required to to react with the limiting reagent. From stoichiometry, the exact amount of reactant needed to react with another element can be calculated. However, if the reagents are not mixed or present in these correct stoichiometric proportions, the limiting reagent will be entirely consumed and the reaction will not go to stoichiometric completion.

Explanation:

Determining the Limiting Reagent

One way to determine the limiting reagent is to compare the mole ratio of the amount of reactants used. This method is most useful when there are only two reactants. One reactant (A) is chosen, and the balanced chemical equation is used to determine the amount of the other reactant (B) necessary to react with A. If the amount of B actually present exceeds the amount required, then B is in excess, and A is the limiting reagent. If the amount of B present is less than is required, then B is the limiting reagent.

To begin, the chemical equation must first be balanced. The law of conservation states that the quantity of each element does not change over the course of a chemical reaction. Therefore, the chemical equation is balanced when the amount of each element is the same on both the left and right sides of the equation. Next, convert all given information (typically masses) into moles, and compare the mole ratios of the given information to those in the chemical equation.

For example: What would be the limiting reagent if 75 grams of C2H3Br3 reacted with 50.0 grams of O2 in the following reaction:

[latex]4 \ C_2H_3Br_3 + 11 \ O_2 \rightarrow 8 \ CO_2 + 6 \ H_2O + 6 \ Br_2[/latex]

First, convert the values to moles:

[latex]75 \ g \times \frac{1 \ mole}{266.72 \ g} = 0.28 \ mol \ C_2H_3Br_3[/latex]

[latex]50.0 \ g \times \frac{1 \ mol}{32 \ g} = 1.56 \ mol \ O_2[/latex]

It is then possible to calculate how much C2H3Br3 would be required if all the O2 is used up:

latex]1.56 \ mol \ O_2 \times \frac{4 \ mol \ C_2H_3Br_3}{11 \ mol \ O_2} = 0.567 \ mol \ C_2H_3Br_3[/latex]

This demonstrates that 0.567 mol C2H3Br3 is required to react with all the oxygen. Since there is only 0.28 mol C2H3Br3 present, C2H3Br3 is the limiting reagent.

Another method of determining the limiting reagent involves the comparison of product amounts that can be formed from each reactant. This method can be extended to any number of reactants more easily than the previous method. Again, begin by balancing the chemical equation and by converting all the given information into moles. Then use stoichiometry to calculate the mass of the product that could be produced for each individual reactant. The reactant that produces the least amount of product is the limiting reagent.

For example: What would be the limiting reagent if 80.0 grams of Na2O2 reacted with 30.0 grams of H2O in the reaction?

[latex]2 \ Na_2O_2 + 2 \ H_2O \rightarrow 4 \ NaOH + O_2[/latex]

The comparison can be done with either product; for this example, NaOH will be the product compared. To determine how much NaOH is produced by each reagent, use the stoichiometric ratio given in the chemical equation as a conversion factor:

[latex]\frac{4 \ mol \ NaOH}{2 \ mol \ Na_2O_2}[/latex] and [latex]\frac {4 \ mol \Na_2O_2}[/latex] and [latex]\frac {4 \ mol \ NaOH}{2 \ mol \ H_2O}[/latex]

Then convert the grams of each reactant into moles of NaOH to see how much NaOH each could produce if the other reactant was in excess.

[latex]80.0 \ g \ Na_2O_2 \times \frac {1 \mol \ Na_2O_2}{77.98 \ g \ Na_2O_2} \times \frac {4 \ moles \ NaOH}{2 \ mol \ Na_2O_2} = 2.06 \ moles \ NaOH[/latex]

[latex]30.0 \ g \ H_2O \times \frac {1 \ mol \ H_2O}{18 \ g \ H_2O} \times \frac {4 \ moles \ NaOH}{2 \ moles \ H_2O} = 3.33 \ moles \ NaOH [/latex]

Obviously the Na2O2 produces less NaOH than H2O; therefore, Na2O2 is the limiting reagent.

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