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Hydrochloric acid reacts with calcium to form hydrogen and calcium chloride. if 100 grams of hydrochloric acid reacts with 100 grams of calcium, what is the limiting reactant? 2hcl ca → cacl2 h2 calcium hydrogen calcium chloride hydrochloric acid

2 Answers

1 vote

Answer: hydrochloric acid

Explanation:
2HCl+Ca\rightarrow CaCl_2+H_2

As can be seen from the chemical equation, 2 moles of hydrochloric acid react with 1 mole of calcium.

According to mole concept, 1 mole of every substance weighs equal to its molar mass.

Thus
2* 36.5=73 g of of hydrochloric acid reacts with 40 g of calcium.

100 g of hydrochloric acid react with=
(40)/(73)* 100=54.79 gof calcium

Thus HCl is the limiting reagent as it limits the formation of product and calcium is the excess reagent as (100-54.79)=45.21 g is left unreacted.

answered
User Matthew Sant
by
7.3k points
5 votes
The balanced chemical reaction is:

2HCl + Ca = CaCl2 + H2

We are given the amount of the reactants to be used for the reaction. These values will be the starting point of our calculations.

100 g HCl ( 1 mol HCl / 36.46 g HCl ) = 2.74 mol HCl

100 g Ca ( 1 mol Ca / 40.08 g ) = 2.08 mol Ca

From the reaction, the mole ratio of the reactants is 2:1 where every 2 moles of hydrochloric acid, 1 mole of calcium is required. Therefore, the limiting reactant for this case is calcium.
answered
User Maxim Popov
by
8.5k points
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