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Limiting and Excess Reactant Home Practice Worksheet

This document is a practice worksheet for 10th-grade students focusing on limiting and excess reactants in chemical reactions. It includes four questions that range from basic identification of limiting reactants to more complex calculations involving mass, percent yield, and concentration. Each question is based on balanced chemical equations and requires students to apply their knowledge of stoichiometry.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
4 views

Limiting and Excess Reactant Home Practice Worksheet

This document is a practice worksheet for 10th-grade students focusing on limiting and excess reactants in chemical reactions. It includes four questions that range from basic identification of limiting reactants to more complex calculations involving mass, percent yield, and concentration. Each question is based on balanced chemical equations and requires students to apply their knowledge of stoichiometry.

Uploaded by

2229
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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🧪 Limiting and Excess Reactant – Home

Practice Worksheet
Name: ___________________

Date: ___________________ Grade Level: 10

Topic: Limiting and Excess Reactants

Question 1 – Basic (Recall and Identification)


Balanced Equation:
2H₂ + O₂ → 2H₂O

You have 3.0 moles of H₂ and 1.0 mole of O₂.


a) Identify the limiting reactant.
b) How many moles of H₂O will be produced?

Question 2 – Intermediate (Mass to Mass Calculation)


Balanced Equation:
Fe + S → FeS

If 11.2 g of Fe reacts with 6.4 g of S,


a) Which reactant is in excess?
b) Calculate the mass of FeS formed.

(Molar masses: Fe = 55.85 g/mol, S = 32.07 g/mol, FeS = 87.91 g/mol)

Question 3 – Challenge (Multi-step, with leftover calculation)


Balanced Equation:
KClO₃ → KCl + O₂ (unbalanced)
Balance the equation first.
Then, given 24.5 g of KClO₃ decomposes:
a) Determine the limiting reactant (if any).
b) Calculate the mass of O₂ produced.
c) If 10.0 g of O₂ is actually collected, what is the percent yield?

(Molar masses: KClO₃ = 122.55 g/mol, KCl = 74.55 g/mol, O₂ = 32.00 g/mol)
Question 4 – Advanced (Limiting Reactant with Concentration)
Balanced Equation:
H₂SO₄ (aq) + 2KOH (aq) → K₂SO₄ (aq) + 2H₂O (l)

In a reaction flask, 25.0 mL of 0.300 M H₂SO₄ is mixed with 50.0 mL of 0.200 M KOH.
a) Determine the limiting reactant.
b) Calculate the moles of water produced.
c) Find the concentration of the excess reactant remaining after the reaction.

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