Limiting Reagents When you just cant get enough!.

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Limiting Reagents When you just cant get enough!

2 eggs + 1 cup flour 3 cookies If I have a dozen eggs, how many cookies can I make? NONE – I have no flour! If I have 6 cups of flour, how many cookies can I make? NONE – I have no eggs!

10 cups of flour + 12 eggs 2 eggs + 1 cup flour = 3 cookies A. 18 B. 30 C. 6 D. 12 E. 10

2 eggs + 1 cup flour 3 cookies If I have a dozen eggs, and 10 cups of flour, how many cookies can I make? 18 – then Im out of eggs. If I have 6 eggs and 2 cups of flour, how many cookies can I make? Six – then Im out of flour.

CONGRATULATIONS! You now understand Limiting Reagents!

Emphasis on limiting The key to limiting reagents is the limiting. In most reactions, there is neither an infinite supply of reactants nor a perfect balance between the finite supply. In most reactions, you run out of 1 reactant before any of the others and the reaction stops.

2 H 2 + O 2 2 H 2 O 8.35 g of hydrogen and g of oxygen are mixed and allowed to react. Which is the limiting reagent? What is the theoretical yield of water? Grams is good, MOLES! MOLES! MOLES! IS BETTER!

2 H 2 + O 2 2 H 2 O 8.35 g H 2 * 1 mol H 2 = 4.14 mol H g H g O 2 * 1 mol O 2 = mol O g O mol H 2 * 2 mol H 2 O = 4.14 mol H 2 O 2 mol H mol O 2 * 2 mol H 2 O = mol H 2 O 1 mol O 2

O 2 is the Limiting Reagent It can make the least amount of product. After you make mol H 2 O, it doesnt matter how much hydrogen you have. You are DONE, because you are out of O 2 !

Theoretical Yield mol H 2 O * g H 2 O = 17.2 g H 2 O 1 mol H 2 O Notice, this is another case of The Dance! g mol mol g Only we do The Dance twice and take the smallest quantity!

Clicker Question N 2 + H 2 NH 3 Ammonia can be made from the gas phase reaction of nitrogen and hydrogen g of nitrogen and 2.47 g of hydrogen were mixed and reacted for 72 hours at 850 °C. How many grams of ammonia would you expect to produce? A g B g C g D g E g

Clicker Question N 2 + H 2 NH 3 Ammonia can be made from the gas phase reaction of nitrogen and hydrogen g of nitrogen and 2.47 g of hydrogen were mixed and reacted for 72 hours at 850 °C. How many grams of ammonia would you expect to produce? A g (conservation of mass doesn t apply) B g (wrong limiting reagent) C g (unbalanced equation) D g (correct) E g (unbalanced equation and wrong limiting reagent)

N 2 + H 2 NH 3 Ammonia can be made from the gas phase reaction of nitrogen and hydrogen g of nitrogen and g of hydrogen were mixed and reacted for 72 hours at 850 °C. How many grams of ammonia would you expect to produce? If g NH 3 were collected, what is the % yield of the reaction?

N H 2 2 NH g N 2 * 1 mol N 2 * 2 mol NH 3 = 2.57 mol NH g N 2 1 mol N g H 2 * 1 mol H 2 * 2 mol NH 3 = 4.14 mol NH g H 2 3 mol H 2 N 2 is the limiting reagent 2.57 mol NH 3 * g NH 3 = g NH 3 1 mol NH 3

Yield! Theoretical Yield = amount you expect to get Actual Yield = amount you actually get % yield = actual yield x 100 theoretical yield

Yield! g NH 3 actual x 100 = % yield g NH 3 expected UNITS! UNITS! UNITS! % yield = g actual 100 g expected

N H 2 2 NH 3 Ammonia can be made from the gas phase reaction of nitrogen and hydrogen g of nitrogen and 8.00 g of hydrogen were mixed and reacted for 72 hours at 850 °C. How many grams of ammonia would you expect to produce if the reaction proceeds with a 76% yield?

N H 2 2 NH g N 2 * 1 mol N 2 * 2 mol NH 3 = mol NH g N 2 1 mol N g H 2 * 1 mol H 2 * 2 mol NH 3 = 2.65 mol NH g H 2 3 mol H 2 N 2 is the limiting reagent mol NH 3 * g NH 3 = g NH 3 theoretical 1 mol NH 3

Actual Yield? g NH 3 expected 76% yield Just another UNITS! UNITS! UNITS! problem: g NH 3 expected * 76 g NH 3 actual = g NH 3 actual 100 g NH 3 expected

N H 2 2 NH 3 Ammonia can be made from the gas phase reaction of nitrogen and hydrogen. If this reaction is known to proceed with 85% yield, how much nitrogen and hydrogen would you need to start with to get g of ammonia?

10.00 g NH 3 actual* 100 g theoretical = g NH 3 85 g actual g NH 3 * 1 mol NH 3 * 3 mol H 2 * g H 2 = g H g NH 3 2 mol NH 3 1 mol H g H 2 * 1 mol H 2 * 1 mol N 2 * g N 2 = g N g H 2 3 mol H 2 1 mol N 2 Notice g H g N 2 = g NH 3 Of course, since I only get g NH 3, what happened to the other g of stuff?

A. It is still N 2 and H 2, it didnt react. B. It is hydrazine, N 2 H 2. C. Oxygen from the air created H 2 O and N 2 O. D. None of the above.