The answer:
<span>the overall balanced equation for the precipitation reaction occurring between silver nitrate and calcium bromide:
</span>CaBr2 + AgNO3-----------> AgBr2 + CaNO3, so among the given choices, the
true answe is
<span>agno3(aq)+cabr2(aq) (as reactants)</span>
In a chemical reaction,
the limiting reagent is the chemical being used up while the excess reactant is
the chemical left after the reaction process.
Before calculating the limiting
and excess reactant, it is important to balance the equation first by stoichiometry.
C25N3H30Cl + NaOH = C25N3H30OH + NaCl
Since the reaction is already balanced, we can now identify which
is the limiting and excess reagent.
First, we need to determine the number of moles of each chemical
in the equation. This is crucial for determining the limiting and excess reagent.
<span>Assuming that there is the
same amount of solution X for each reactant</span>
1.0 M NaOH ( X ) = 1.0
moles NaOH
1.00 x 10-5 M C25N3H30Cl
( X ) = 1.00 x 10-5 moles C25N3H30Cl
<span>The result showed that the
crystal violet has lesser amount than NaOH. Thus, the limiting reactant in this
chemical reaction is crystal violet and the excess reactant is NaOH.</span>
1) Find the number of molecules in 7.88 g of sulfur
molar mass of S8 = 8*atomic mass of S = 8 * 32.0 g / mol = 256.0 g/mol
Number of moles = mass in grams / atomic mass = 7.88 g / 256.0 g / mol = 0.0308 moles
2) Find the mass of 0.0308 moles of P4
mass = number of moles * molar mass
molar mass of P4 = 4 * atomic mass of P = 4 * 31 g/mol = 124 g/mol
mass of P4 = 0.0308 moles * 124 g/mol = 3.8192g ≈ 3.82 g.
Answer: 3.82 grams of P4 will have the same number of molecules as 7.88 g of S8 (that is 0.0308 moles of molecules)
Physical properties of a bag of microwaveable popcorn are the mass of it, the color of it, the size of it, and the weight of it. Two chemical properties of a bag of microwavable popcorn are it changed from seeds to popcorn and it popped.
CaCO3(s) ⟶ CaO(s)+CO2(s)
<span>
moles CaCO3: 1.31 g/100 g/mole CaCO3= 0.0131 </span>
<span>
From stoichiometry, 1 mole of CO2 is formed per 1 mole CaCO3,
therefore 0.0131 moles CO2 should also be formed.
0.0131 moles CO2 x 44 g/mole CO2 = 0.576 g CO2 </span>
Therefore:<span>
<span>% Yield: 0.53/.576 x100= 92 percent yield</span></span>