depends on what you are focusing on. are you speaking in terms of molar mass, Atomic Mass units(u), grams, heat, electricity?
The reactants are the elements or compounds that are reacting with one another. And the products are what is produced from the reaction. For example, MgO + H20 -> Mg(OH)2. MgO and H2O are the reactants. Mg(OH)2 is the product.
The reactants are the substances that react together; the reactants are on the left side of the equation. The product (or products) are what is produced from the reaction, which is on the right side of the equation. For example: 2H2 + O2 --> 2(H2O) The reactants are H2 & O2 and the product is H2O
equilibrium means the rate of forward reaction = rate of backward reaction... there are three types of equilibrium 1. amount of products > amount of reactants 2. amount of products = amount of reactants 3. amount of products < amount of reactants
The reactants are the substances that react together; the reactants are on the left side of the equation. The product (or products) are what is produced from the reaction, which is on the right side of the equation. For example: 2H2 + O2 --> 2(H2O) The reactants are H2 & O2 and the product is H2O
2 reactants and 2 products
The volume is 50 %.
2 reactants and 2 products.
CaC2 + 2H2O ==> C2H2 + Ca(OH)2moles of C2H2 produced = moles of Ca(OH)2 produced (1:1 mole ratio is the stoichiometry)moles of Ca(OH)2 produced = 7 g x 1mol/74.1 g = 0.0945 molesmoles C2H2 = 0.0945 molesgrams C2H2 = 0.0945 moles x 26 g/mole = 2.46 grams = 2 grams to 1 sig fig
No. The heat of reaction for 50mL of each will be multiplied by 2 for 100mL of each since heat of reaction is really on a per mole product basis, and there will be twice as many moles of both HCl and NaOH in 100mL as in 50mL.
E = mc^2
To address excess problems in stoichiometry, start by determining the limiting reactant based on given quantities. Then calculate the amount of product formed from this limiting reactant. Next, subtract this amount from the excess reactant quantity to find the remaining excess reactant. Finally, determine if there is any new product formed from the excess reactant.
In a double-replacement reaction, two reactants exchange ions to form two products. Therefore, there are two reactants and two products in this type of reaction.