Title: Limiting Reagents and Percent Yield
1Limiting Reagents and Percent Yield
2What Is a Limiting Reagent?
- Many cooks follow a recipe when making a new
dish. - When a cook prepares to cook he/she needs to know
that sufficient amounts of all the ingredients
are available. - Lets look at a recipe for the formation of a
double cheeseburger
31 hamburger bun
1 tomato slice
1 lettuce leaf
2 slices of cheese
2 burger patties
4- If you want to make 5 double cheese burgers
- How many hamburger buns do you need?
5
- How many hamburger patties do you need?
10
- How many slices of cheese do you need?
10
- How many slices of tomato do you need?
5
5- How many double cheeseburgers can you make if you
start with
- 1 bun, 2 patties, 2 slices of cheese, 1 tomato
slice
1
- 2 buns, 4 patties, 4 slices of cheese, 2 tomato
slices
2
- 1 mole of buns, 2 moles of patties, 2 moles of
cheese, 1 mole of tomato slices
1 mole
- 10 buns, 20 patties, 2 slices of cheese, 10
tomato slices
1
6- We cant make anymore than 1 double cheeseburger
with our ingredients. - The slices of cheese limits the number of
cheeseburgers we can make. - If one of our ingredients gets used up during our
preparation it is called the limiting reactant
(LR) - The LR limits the amount of product we can form
in this case double cheeseburgers. - It is equally impossible for a chemist to make a
certain amount of a desired compound if there
isnt enough of one of the reactants.
7- As weve been learning, a balanced chemical rxn
is a chemists recipe. - Which allows the chemist to predict the amount of
product formed from the amounts of ingredients
available
- Lets look at the reaction equation for the
formation of ammonia
N2(g) 3H2(g) ? 2NH3(g)
- When 1 mole of N2 reacts with 3 moles of H2, 2
moles of NH3 are produced. - How much NH3 could be made if 2 moles of N2 were
reacted with 3 moles of H2?
2 mols of ammonia
8N2(g) 3H2(g) ? 2NH3(g)
- The amount of H2 limits the amount of NH3 that
can be made. - From the amount of N2 available we can make 4
moles of NH3 - From the amount of H2 available we can only make
2 moles of NH3. - H2 is our limiting reactant here.
- It runs out before the N2 is used up.
- Therefore, at the end of the reaction there
should be N2 left over. - When there is reactant left over it is said to be
in excess.
9- How much N2 will be left over after the reaction?
- In our rxn it takes 1 mol of N2 to react all of 3
mols of H2, so there must be 1 mol of N2 that
remains unreacted. - We can use our new stoich calculation skills to
determine 3 possible types of LR type
calculations. - Determine which of the reactants will run out
first (limiting reactant) - Determine amount of product
- Determine how much excess reactant is wasted
10Limiting Reactant Problems
Given the following reaction 2Cu S ? Cu2S
- What is the limiting reactant when 82.0 g of Cu
reacts with 25.0 g S? - What is the maximum amount of Cu2S that can be
formed? - How much of the other reactant is wasted?
11- Our 1st goal is to calculate how much S would
react if all of the Cu was reacted. - From that we can determine the limiting reactant
(LR). - Then we can use the Limiting Reactant to
calculate the amount of product formed and the
amount of excess reactant left over.
82g Cu?
mol Cu?
mol S?
g S
122Cu S ? Cu2S
1mol S
1molCu
32.1g S
82.0gCu
2molCu
1mol S
63.5gCu
20.7 g S
- So if all of our 82.0g of Copper were reacted
completely it would require only 20.7 grams of
Sulfur. - Since we initially had 25g of S, we are going to
run out of the Cu, the limiting reactant) end
up with 4.3 grams of S
13- Copper being our Limiting Reactant is then used
to determine how much product is produced. - The amount of Copper we initially start with
limits the amount of product we can make.
1molCu2S
1molCu
159gCu2S
82.0gCu
2molCu2S
1molCu2S
63.5gCu
103 g Cu2S
14- So the reaction between 82.0g of Cu and 25.0g of
S can only produce 103g of Cu2S. - The Cu runs out before the S and we will end up
wasting 4.7 g of the S.
Ex 2 Hydrogen gas can be produced in the lab by
the rxn of Magnesium metal with HCl according to
the following rxn equation Mg 2HCl ? MgCl2
H2
- What is the LR when 6.0 g HCl reacts with 5.0 g
Mg? What is the maximum amount of H2 that can be
formed? And how much of the other reactant is
wasted?
155.0g Mg ?
mol Mg ?
2mol HCl ?
g HCl
36.5gHCl
1molMg
2molHCl
5.0g Mg
1molHCl
1molMg
24.3gMg
15.0g HCl
- So if 5.0g of Mg were used up it would take 15.0g
HCl, but we only had 6.0g of HCl to begin with. - Therefore, the 6.0g of HCl will run out before
the 5.0g of Mg, so HCl is our Limiting Reactant.
166.0g HCl?
2mol HCl ?
1mol H2 ?
g H2
2.0gH2
1molHCl
1molH2
6.0g HCl
1molH2
2molHCl
36.5gHCl
0.164 g H2 produced
6.0g HCl?
2mol HCl ?
1mol Mg ?
g Mg
24.3gMg
1molHCl
1molMg
6.0g HCl
1molMg
2molHCl
36.5gHCl
1.997 g Mg
- 5.0 g Mg
3.01g Mg extra
17Calculating Percent Yield
- In theory, when a teacher gives an exam to the
class, every student should get a grade of 100. - Your exam grade, expressed as a perc-ent, is a
quantity that shows how well you did on the exam
compared with how well you could have done if you
had answered all questions correctly
18- This calc is similar to the percent yield calc
that you do in the lab when the product from a
chemical rxn is less than you expected based on
the balanced eqn. - You might have assumed that if we use stoich to
calculate that our rxn will produce 5.2 g of
product, that we will actually recover 5.2 g of
product in the lab. - This assumption is as faulty as assuming that all
students will score 100 on an exam.
19- When an equation is used to calculate the amount
of product that is possible during a rxn, a value
representing the theoretical yield is obtained. - The theoretical yield is the maximum amount of
product that could be formed from given amounts
of reactants. - In contrast, the amount of product that forms
when the rxn is carried out in the lab is called
the actual yield. - The actual yield is often less than the
theoretical yield.
20- The percent yield is the ratio of the actual
yield to the theoretical yield as a percent - It measures the measures the efficiency of the
reaction
actual yield
Percent yield
x 100
theoretical yield
- What causes a percent yield to be less than 100?
21- Rxns dont always go to completion when this
occurs, less than the expected amnt of product is
formed. - Impure reactants and competing side rxns may
cause unwanted products to form. - Actual yield can also be lower than the
theoretical yield due to a loss of product during
filtration or transferring between containers. - If a wet precipitate is recovered it might weigh
heavy due to incomplete drying, etc.
22Calcium carbonate is synthesized by heating,as
shown in the following equation CaO CO2 ?
CaCO3
- What is the theoretical yield of CaCO3 if 24.8 g
of CaO is heated with 43.0 g of CO2? - What is the percent yield if 33.1 g of CaCO3 is
produced?
Determine which reactant is the limiting and
then decide what the theoretical yield is.
2324.8gCaO?
molCaO?
mol CO2?
gCO2
24.8 g CaO
1molCaO
1mol CO2
44 g CO2
56g CaO
1mol CaO
1molCO2
LR
19.5gCO2
1mol CaO
100g CaCO3
24.8 g CaO
1molCaCO3
56g CaO
1mol CaO
1molCaCO3
44.3 g CaCO3
24- CaO is our LR, so the reaction should
theoretically produce 44.3 g of CaCO3 (How
efficient were we?) - Our percent yield is
33.1 g CaCO3
Percent yield
x 100
44.3 g CaCO3
Percent yield 74.7