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8 March, 19:57

How many grams of the excess reactant remain after the limiting reactant is completely consumed? express your answer using two significant figures?

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  1. 8 March, 22:20
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    4 NH3 (g) + 5 O2 (g) - - > 4 NO (g) + 6 H2O (g)

    4 NH3 (g) : 4 moles @ 17.03 g/mole = 68.12 g NH3

    5 O2 (g) : 5 moles @ 32 g. mole = 160 g O2

    we needed over twice the # of grams of O2, as compared to NH3, ...

    they didn't add that, ...

    O2 is the limiting reagent

    find the # of grams of NH3 that react:

    4.75 g O2 @ 68.12 g NH3 / 160 g O2 = 2.02 g of NH3 actually do react

    find How many grams of the excess reactant remains:

    3.30 - 2.02 =

    your answer: 1.28 grams of NH3 remain

    4 NH3 (g) + 5 O2 (g) 4 NO (g) + 6 H2O (g)

    In a certain experiment, 3.30 g of NH3 reacts with 4.75 g of O2.

    3.56 grams of NO form
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