Share
Aluminum reacts with chlorine gas to produce aluminum chloride crystals. How many grams of aluminum chloride will be produced if the reactio
Question
Lost your password? Please enter your email address. You will receive a link and will create a new password via email.
Answers ( )
Answer:
596 g of AlCl₃
Explanation:
The reaction is:
2Al + 3Cl₂ → 2AlCl₃
Firstly we need to determine the limiting reactant and we need to determine the moles of each
135 g . 1 mol / 26.98 g = 5 moles of Al
475 g . 1mol / 70.9 g = 6.7 moles of chlorine
Ratio in the reaction is 3:2
3 moles of chlorine gas need 2 moles of Al to react
Then, our 6.7 moles of gas might react to (6.7 . 2 ) /3 = 4.47 moles of Al
We have 5 moles of Al and we need 4.47 moles, so this is the excess reactant. In conclussion, Cl₂ is the limiting.
2 moles of Al react to 3 moles of gas
Our 5 moles of Al may react to (5 . 3 )/2 = 7.5 moles of gas
It’s ok because we only have 6.7 moles, and there is not enough gas.
Now we calculate the product’s mass
3 moles of gas can produce 2 moles of salt
Then, our 6.7 moles of gas will produce (6.7 . 2) /3 = 4.47 moles
We convert moles to mass: 4.47 mol . 133.33 g/mol = 596 g of AlCl₃