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31 July, 17:28

Hydrochloric acid and calcium carbonate react to form calcium chloride, carbon dioxide, and water. If you being with 1.25 L of 1.20 M calcium carbonate and a stoichiometric amount of hydrochloric acid, how many grams of carbon dioxide will be formed

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  1. 31 July, 20:03
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    44.01 grams of carbon dioxide will be formed

    Explanation:

    This is the balance equation:

    2HCl (aq) + CaCO₃ (aq) → CaCl₂ (aq) + CO₂ (g) + H₂O (l)

    Firstly, let's find out the moles for the salt, in the reactants.

    Molarity. volume = Moles

    1.2 mol/L. 1.25L = 1.5 moles

    The stoichiometric amount of hydrochloric acid is 2.

    Ratio between reactants is 2:1

    If I have 2 moles of HCl, I need 1 mol of carbonate. I have 1.5 moles, so the salt is in excess and the limiting is the HCl.

    Ratio between HCl and CO₂ is 2:1

    If I have 2 moles of HCl, I make 1 mol of CO₂

    The grams formed are just, the molar mass.

    44.01 g
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