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Limiting Reagents. Grilled Cheese Sandwich Idea…. Bread + Cheese  ‘Cheese Melt’. 2 B + C  B 2 C. If you have 100 pieces of bread and 30 slices of cheese, how many sandwiches could you make?. Grilled Cheese Sandwich Idea…. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Limiting Reagents
Page 2: Limiting Reagents

Grilled Cheese Sandwich Idea…..

Bread + Cheese ‘Cheese Melt’

2 B + C B2C

If you have 100 pieces of bread and 30 slices of cheese, how many sandwiches could you make?

Page 3: Limiting Reagents

Grilled Cheese Sandwich Idea…..

30 sandwiches…… but why?

Because you can only make as many sandwiches as you have of the ingredient with the least amount.

So you could say the cheese limits the amount of sandwiches that you can make!

Page 4: Limiting Reagents

In chemical equations……

There is often a situation very much like the grilled cheese sandwiches

There is often more of one compound then another in a chemical reaction and the amount of products that are produces are limited by one of the reactants

Page 5: Limiting Reagents

Container 1

Zumdahl, Zumdahl, DeCoste, World of Chemistry 2002, page 269

Page 6: Limiting Reagents

Before and After Reaction 1

All the hydrogen and nitrogen atoms combine.

Before the reaction After the reaction

Zumdahl, Zumdahl, DeCoste, World of Chemistry 2002, page 269

Page 7: Limiting Reagents

Container 2

Zumdahl, Zumdahl, DeCoste, World of Chemistry 2002, page 270

Page 8: Limiting Reagents

Before and After Reaction 2

Before the reaction After the reaction

Zumdahl, Zumdahl, DeCoste, World of Chemistry 2002, page 270

Page 9: Limiting Reagents

Real-World Stoichiometry:Limiting Reactants

LeMay Jr, Beall, Robblee, Brower, Chemistry Connections to Our Changing World , 1996, page 366

IdealStoichiometry

LimitingReactants

Page 10: Limiting Reagents

Limiting Reactants

aluminum + chlorine gas aluminum chloride

Al(s) + Cl2(g) AlCl3

2 Al(s) + 3 Cl2(g) 2 AlCl3

100 g 100 g ? g

A. 200 g B. 125 g C. 667 g D. ???

Page 11: Limiting Reagents

Another example: Cookies

1 cup butter

1/2 cup white sugar

1 cup packed brown sugar

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

2 eggs

2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour

1 teaspoon baking soda

1 teaspoon salt

2 cups semisweet chocolate chips

Makes 3 dozen

If we had the exactly amount of ingredients listed above, could we make 4 dozen cookies?

What if we had 6 eggs and twice as much of everything else, could we make 9 dozen cookies?

What if we only had one egg, could we make 3 dozen cookies?

Page 12: Limiting Reagents

Limiting Reactant

Most of the time in chemistry we have more of one reactant than we need to completely use up other reactant.

That reactant is said to be in excess (there is too much).

The other reactant limits how much product we get. Once it runs out, the reaction stops. This is called the limiting reactant.

Page 13: Limiting Reagents

Steps to Solving limiting reagent problems:

1. Write a balanced equation if its not given in the question.

2. Calculate the number of moles for each reactant (convert from g to mol)

3. Pick one of the products.

4. Using mol to mol conversions, calculate the number of mol of product for each reactant

5. The lower number of mol is the limiting reagent!

Page 14: Limiting Reagents

Example:

1) 2 Al + 3 Cl2 2 AlCl3

10.0g of aluminum reacts with 35.0 grams of chlorine gas to produce aluminum chloride. Which reactant is limiting, which is in excess, and how much product is produced?

2) X mol Al = 10.0 g x 1 mol Al

26.98g = 0.371 mol Al

X mol Cl2 = 35.0 g x 1 mol Cl2

70.90g

= 0.494 mol Cl2

Page 15: Limiting Reagents

2 Al + 3 Cl2 2 AlCl3 0.371 mol Al and 0.494 mol Cl2

3) Product = AlCl3

4) X mol AlCl3 = 0.371 mol Al

Example:

X 2 mol AlCl3

2 mol Al

= 0.371 mol AlCl3

X mol AlCl3 = 0.494 mol Cl2 X 2 mol AlCl3 3 mol Cl2

= 0.329 mol AlCl3

Pick the lower one, this is the limiting reagent

Page 16: Limiting Reagents

Example:

Therefore, Cl2 is the limiting reactant. Once the 35.0g of chlorine is used up, the reaction comes to a stop!

Page 17: Limiting Reagents

Limiting Reactant Practice:

1) HF gas is produced by the double displacement reaction of CaF2 with H2SO4. Determine the limiting reagent if 10.0 g of CaF2 reacts with 15.5 g of H2SO4.

2) 2 Al + 3 CuCl2 3 Cu + 2 AlCl3. If 0.25 g of Al reacts with 0.51 g of CuCl2, determine the limiting reactant.

3) 15.0 g of potassium reacts with 15.0 g of iodine. Determine which reactant is limiting and how much product (in grams) is made.

Page 18: Limiting Reagents

Day 2

Finding amount of excess Often limiting reagent questions will ask you

to find the excess of the non limiting reagent reactant

Page 19: Limiting Reagents

Finding the Amount of Excess

Find the amount actually used, using the limiting reagent to calculate moles then convert to grams

Then you can subtract that amount from the starting (given amount) to find the amount of excess.

Page 20: Limiting Reagents

Example:

1) 2 Al + 3 Cl2 2 AlCl3

10.0g of aluminum reacts with 35.0 grams of chlorine gas to produce aluminum chloride. How much excess reactant is left after the reaction?

2) X mol Al = 10.0 g x 1 mol Al

26.98g = 0.371 mol Al

X mol Cl2 = 35.0 g x 1 mol Cl2

70.90g

= 0.494 mol Cl2

Page 21: Limiting Reagents

2 Al + 3 Cl2 2 AlCl3 0.371 mol Al and 0.494 mol Cl2

3) Product = AlCl3

4) X mol AlCl3 = 0.371 mol Al

Example:

X 2 mol AlCl3

2 mol Al

= 0.371 mol AlCl3

X mol AlCl3 = 0.494 mol Cl2 X 2 mol AlCl3 3 mol Cl2

= 0.329 mol AlCl3

Pick the lower one, this is the limiting reagent

Page 22: Limiting Reagents

The question said there was 10.0g of Al to start with:

X mol Al = 0.494 mol Cl2 X 2 mol Al 3 mol Cl2

= 0.329 mol Al

= 8.88 g Al after reactionX 26.98 g 1 mol Al

X g Al = 0.329 mol Al

10.0g – 8.88g = 1.22g of excess Al after the reaction