moles of reagant
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moles of reagant
I want to make sure I am right but say you are asked to find the limiting reagent in a chemical reaction and then asked how many moles of that reagent is required, would you use the coefficient in the equation or do you need to solve it with conversions?
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Re: moles of reagant
You would use the coefficients to find out exactly how much of one reactant you need to completely react with a given amount of the other reactant.
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Re: moles of reagant
You would have to convert the amount of grams of the limiting reactant to moles, then compare the ratios of the reactants in the balanced equation to figure out how many moles of the reactant are required.
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Re: moles of reagant
You go from grams to moles and then look at the moles required from the equation and multiply those values.
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Re: moles of reagant
What you need to do is first find the limiting reagent. You would do this by converting mass of both reagents to moles, and then using the stoichiometric coefficients to analyze which reagent will run out first. In short, you would need to use the coefficient in the equation in your conversions in order to solve this problem.
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