0,092 moles CaO
The limiting reagent (aka limiting reactant) is the substance which is completely used in a chemical reaction.
Limiting reactant is the one that limits the rate of the reaction. It is always supplied in adequate amount so that there is enough for the reaction to carry out to obtain the desired products. under ideal cases, When the reaction reaches completion there will be no limiting reactant.
The more reactant, the faster the reaction The less reactant, the slower the reaction hope that clears it up for you
The coefficients in a balanced chemical equation shows how many moles of each reactant is needed in order for a reaction to take place. After determining how many moles of each reactant is required, you would convert it to grams to calculate how much of each reactant is needed to form a given amount of product in a chemical reaction.
single replacement reaction
Limiting reactant
reaction will stop.
Because the limiting reactant It is completely consumed before the other reactant.
In a chemical reaction the limiting reactant is the reactant that there is the least of in the reaction; it determines the amount of product formed. In a chemical reaction it is the reactant that gets completely "used up"
When the limiting reactant is completely used up. A limiting reactant is the reactant that determines the amount of product. To determine this use the balanced chemical reaction with the masses of the reactants to determine the moles of product formed. The reactant that forms the least amount of product will be the limiting reactant.
The limiting reagent (aka limiting reactant) is the substance which is completely used in a chemical reaction.
Limiting reactant is the one that limits the rate of the reaction. It is always supplied in adequate amount so that there is enough for the reaction to carry out to obtain the desired products. under ideal cases, When the reaction reaches completion there will be no limiting reactant.
a product
product - answered by brandy :)
The Limiting Reactant is the reactant that runs out first in a reaction.
The amount of product is determined by the limiting reactant. Once one reactant is used completely, no more product can be produced.
reactant + reactant = product