1 / 6

Unit: Stoichiometry

Day 4 - Notes. Unit: Stoichiometry. Limiting reactant calculations. After today you will be able to…. Calculate the limiting reactant using two mass-mass calculations. Limiting Reactant Calculations.

Download Presentation

Unit: Stoichiometry

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Day 4 - Notes Unit: Stoichiometry Limiting reactant calculations

  2. After today you will be able to… • Calculate the limiting reactant using two mass-mass calculations

  3. Limiting Reactant Calculations The limiting reactant (L.R.) is the reactant which runs out first and limits the amount of product that can be made. • Two mass-mass calculations will be used. • The L.R. is the one that yields the smaller amount.

  4. Ok… Time to relate this back to chemistry… A real-world example: Making Funfetti Cupcakes! ___mix + ___eggs + ___oil  ___pan of cupcakes Let’s say you have… 1 3 2 1 Mixes are the “limiting reactant” because they are used up first! 1 pan 3 mixes 3 pans = x 1 mix 1 pan 15 eggs 5 pans = x 3 eggs 1 pan 8 tbsp oil 4 pans = x 2 tbsp oil

  5. Example: If 17.1g of potassium reacts with 14.3g of fluorine, which reactant is the limiting reactant and what mass of potassium fluoride can theoretically be produced? Word equation: potassium + fluorine  potassium fluoride Formula Equation: 2K + F2 2KF 1K=39.10 1F=19.00 17.1gK 14.3gF2 ?gKF K: 17.1gK 58.10g U: ?gKF 1 mol K 39.10g K 17.1g K 1 2 mol KF 2 mol K 58.10gKF 1 mol KF x x x x = 25.4gKF K: 14.3gF2 U: ?gKF 1 mol F2 38.00gF2 14.3gF2 1 2 mol KF 1 mol F2 58.10gKF 1 mol KF x x x = 43.7g KF Potassium is the L.R. 25.4g of potassium fluoride can be produced.

  6. Questions? Complete WS 4 for HOMEWORK!

More Related