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Activity 1 Mole Conversion & Limiting Reactant

The document contains a series of chemistry problems related to mole conversions, limiting reactants, and percent yield calculations. It includes specific questions about the number of moles, grams, and molecules for various compounds, as well as determining limiting reactants and calculating yields in chemical reactions. Each section presents a different reaction scenario requiring calculations based on given quantities.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
2 views

Activity 1 Mole Conversion & Limiting Reactant

The document contains a series of chemistry problems related to mole conversions, limiting reactants, and percent yield calculations. It includes specific questions about the number of moles, grams, and molecules for various compounds, as well as determining limiting reactants and calculating yields in chemical reactions. Each section presents a different reaction scenario requiring calculations based on given quantities.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Conversion

1. How many moles are in 68 grams of copper (II) hydroxide, Cu(OH)2?


2. How many grams are in 3.3 moles of potassium sulfide, K2S?
3. How many molecules are there in 24 grams of FeF3?
4. How many grams are there in 7.5 x 1023 molecules of H2SO4?
5. How many molecules are there in 1.25 moles of CCl4?
6. How many moles are there in 7.4 x 1023 molecules of AgNO3?

Limiting Reactant and Percent Yield


1. Refer to this chemical reaction: 2 NaCl + Pb(NO3)2 → 2 NaNO3 + PbCl2
a. How many grams of NaNo3 are produced from the reaction of 18.7 g of NaCl and 55.7 g of
Pb(NO3)2?
b. What is the limiting reactant?
c. How much excess is left over, in grams?

2. Consider the following reaction: 2 Al + 6 HBr → 2 AlBr3 + 3 H2


a. What is the limiting reactant?
b. When 2.65 moles of Al reacts with 5.80 moles of HBr, how many moles of AlBr3 are formed?
c. For the reactant in excess, how many moles are left over at the end of the reaction?

3. Consider the following reaction: 3 Si + 2 N2 → Si3N4


a. When 15.85 moles of Si reacts with 14.32 moles of N2, how many moles of Si3N4 are formed?
b. What is the limiting reactant?
c. For the reactant in excess, how many moles are left over at the end of the reaction?

4. Consider the following reaction: 2 CuCl2 + 4 KI → 2 CuI + 4 KCl + I2


a. When 0.45 moles of CuCl2 reacts with 0.70 moles of KI, how many moles of I2 are formed?
b. What is the limiting reactant?
c. What is the percent yield if the actual yield is grams 35.15 grams I2?

5. Consider the following chemical reaction: Cl2 + 2KBr → 2KCl + Br2


Balance the equation.
a. How many grams of bromine should form from the reaction of 40.0 grams of potassium bromide
and 0.0 grams of chlorine?
b. If in the lab you performed this experiment, and you were able to collect 20.5 grams of bromine
for this reaction, what is your percent yield?
c. How much of the excess reactant would react during this experiment?
d. How much of the excess reactant will be left over, unreacted?

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