asked 72.8k views
1 vote
A mixture of 20.0 g of P and 78.6 g Cl₂ reacts completely to form PCl₃ and PCl₅ as the only products. Find the mass of PCl₃ formed.

1 Answer

1 vote

Final answer:

To solve for the mass of PCl3 formed from 20.0 g P and 78.6 g Cl2, we need to know the balanced equation and whether one product is favored over the other; without this information, the mass of PCl3 cannot be accurately calculated.

Step-by-step explanation:

To determine the mass of PCl3 formed from the reaction of 20.0 g of P (phosphorus) and 78.6 g of Cl2 (chlorine gas), we must first establish the molar masses and the stoichiometry of the reaction. The molar mass of Cl2 is 70.90 g/mol; therefore, the moles of Cl2 can be calculated as follows:


(78.6 g Cl2 / 70.90 g/mol Cl2) = 1.108 moles Cl2

The molar mass of P is 30.97 g/mol; thus, the moles of P can be calculated as:


(20.0 g P / 30.97 g/mol P) = 0.646 moles P


The balanced equation for the formation of PCl 3 and PCl 5 as products is:


2 P + 3 Cl2 → 2 PCl3 (Reaction 1)

P + 5 Cl

2

→ PCl

5

(Reaction 2)

However, we do not have enough information to determine the stoichiometry of the specific reaction pathway. If we assume that only PCl3 is formed, then P would be the limiting reagent and the mass of PCl3 could be calculated from the moles of P. If a mixture of PCl3 and PCl5 is formed, we cannot determine the mass of PCl3 without a stoichiometry that describes the ration in which PCl3 and PCl5 form. Therefore, additional information or assumptions are required to solve this problem.

answered
User Eddie Awad
by
7.1k points
Welcome to Qamnty — a place to ask, share, and grow together. Join our community and get real answers from real people.