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5 September, 19:36

Zinc sulfide reacts with oxygen according to the reaction: 2ZnS (s) 3O2 (g) →2ZnO (s) 2SO2 (g) A reaction mixture initially contains 3.0 mol ZnS and 5.2 mol O2. Part A Once the reaction has occurred as completely as possible, what amount (in moles) of the excess reactant is left

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  1. 5 September, 23:24
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    There will remain 0.7 moles of O2 in excess

    Explanation:

    Step 1: The balanced equation

    2ZnS (s) + 3O2 (g) → 2ZnO (s) + 2SO2 (g)

    Step 2: Given data

    Number of moles of ZnS = 3.0 mol

    Number of moles of O2 = 5.2 mol

    Molar mass ZnS = 97.47 g/mol

    Molar mass of O2 = 32 g/mol

    Step 3: Calculate limiting reactant

    For 2 moles of ZnS consumed, we need 3 moles of O2 to produce 2 moles of ZnO and 2 moles of SO2

    ZnS is the limiting reactant. It will completely be consumed. (3.0 moles). O2 is the reactant in excess. There will be consumed 3.0 mol * 3/2 = 4.5 mol

    There will remain 5.2 - 4.5 = 0.7 moles of O2

    There will be produced 3 moles of ZnO and 3 moles of SO2
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