Ask Question
2 February, 19:30

Given 6.0 mol of N2 are mixed with 12.0 mol of H2. Equation: N2 + 3H2--> 2NH3

Which chemical is in excess? What is the excess in moles?

Theoretically, how many moles of NH3 will be produced?

If the percentage yield of NH3 is 80%, how many moles of NH3 are actually produced?

+4
Answers (1)
  1. 2 February, 21:05
    0
    1) Excess reagent

    1 mol N2 / 3 mol H2

    6.0 mol N2 * 3 mol H2 / 1 mol N2 = 18 mol H2

    18mol H2 > 12 mol H2 = > H2 is limiting (you need 18 mol H2 to use all the 6 mol N2), then N2 is in excees.

    12.0 mol H2 * 1mol N2 / 3 mol H2 = 4 mol N2 is the quantity that will react, then the excess is 6 mol N2 - 4 mol N2 = 2 mol N2

    2) NH3 produced

    12 mol H2 * [2 mol NH3 / 3 mol H2] = 8 mol NH3

    Aslso, 4 mol N2 * [2molNH3 / 1 molN2] = 8 mol NH3, the same result.

    3) Yield

    80% * 8 mol NH3 = 6.4 mol NH3
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Find an answer to your question ✅ “Given 6.0 mol of N2 are mixed with 12.0 mol of H2. Equation: N2 + 3H2--> 2NH3 Which chemical is in excess? What is the excess in moles? ...” in 📘 Chemistry if you're in doubt about the correctness of the answers or there's no answer, then try to use the smart search and find answers to the similar questions.
Search for Other Answers