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Real reactions, in the lab, are rarely carried out in exact stiochiometric amounts › so... Chemists usually don’t mix reactants together in the exact amounts that chemical equations tell us to › Why not? Synthetic chemistry is a lot like cooking 2
Limiting Reagent- the reactant that is used up first is the limiting reagent Excess Reagent- this reactant is present in greater quantities than necessary By figuring out which reagent is limiting and which is excess we can determine how much product we SHOULD get 3
Okay, think of it like this: › To make one car you need 1 body and 4 tires: 4
We have 2 car bodies and 4 tires? We can still only make one car! › The second car body is an excess, the tires are limiting how many cars we can make! 5
We have 1 car body and 8 tires? We can still only make one car because we are now limited by the number of car bodies and have an excess of tires! 6
Think of the two reagents in terms of car bodies and tires › The number of moles tells us how much of each we have to start Most of the time you are given the amounts of reagents in terms of grams, you need to CONVERT TO MOLES!! GRAM 7
Urea is prepared from the reaction of ammonia with carbon dioxide as follows: 2NH 3(g) +CO 2(g) (NH 2 ) 2 CO (aq) + H 2 O (l) If g of NH 3 are treated with 1142 g of CO 2 which of the two reactants is the limiting reagent? 8
2NH 3(g) +CO 2(g) (NH 2 ) 2 CO (aq) +H 2 O (l) Convert to moles g1142 g 9 HAVE
2NH 3(g) +CO 2(g) (NH 2 ) 2 CO (aq) + H 2 O (l) g1142 g Pick one (lets arbitrarily pick NH 3 ) Calculate the mols of CO 2 necessary to react with the moles of NH 3 we have › Mols NH 3 mols CO 2 10 =18.7 mols CO 2 NEED
Is the amount of CO2 you need more or less than what you have? More CO2 is in LIMITING Less CO2 is in EXCESS Need: 18.7 mols Have : mols 11
So, since we have more CO 2 than we actually need to do the reaction, CO 2 is in excess and, hence, NH 3 must be the limiting reagent. 12
1. Convert both reactants to moles. 2. See how many moles of the other reactant your need. › Mole bridge 3. If you have more of a reactant than you need, it is in excess. If you have less than you need, it is limiting. › Ie. Look at which reactant limits the number of moles of product that you can make. 13