The balanced chemical reaction equation says that you get 3 moles of O2.
m O2 = ( n O2 ) ( M O2 )
m O2 = ( 3 mol O2 ) ( 32.00 g O2 / mol O2 = 96 g O2<----------
Answer: 96 g of O2 <------------------------------
From 245,1 g of KClO3 96 g oxygen can be obtained.
Reactant+Reactant=Product
With any chemical reaction you have reactants and products, for this question I'll use the example of the formation of water from it's parts, Hydrogen and Oxygen. The equation would look like this: 2H2 (g) + O2 (g) -> 2H2O (l) Let's say you start out with 3 moles of Hydrogen and 1 mole of Oxygen. From the reaction you can see that for every mole of O2 that reacts, 2 moles of H2 are reacted. This means that after your mole oxygen reacts, you are still left with a mole of excess Hydrogen. Thus, Hydrogen is considered the excess reactant, and Oxygen is considered the limited reactant. In short, the limited reactant is whichever reactant you will use up in the reaction first.
Something that reacts to another substance.
no thats completely stupid. butane reacts with oxygen to produce carbon dioxide and water
oxygen reacts with iron and forms rust Oxygen reacts with iron to form iron oxide.
Reactant+Reactant=Product
Yes. Hydrogen from the fuel reacts with oxygen, either as an elemental source or from an oxygen-containing reactant, to form water.
Reactant.
With any chemical reaction you have reactants and products, for this question I'll use the example of the formation of water from it's parts, Hydrogen and Oxygen. The equation would look like this: 2H2 (g) + O2 (g) -> 2H2O (l) Let's say you start out with 3 moles of Hydrogen and 1 mole of Oxygen. From the reaction you can see that for every mole of O2 that reacts, 2 moles of H2 are reacted. This means that after your mole oxygen reacts, you are still left with a mole of excess Hydrogen. Thus, Hydrogen is considered the excess reactant, and Oxygen is considered the limited reactant. In short, the limited reactant is whichever reactant you will use up in the reaction first.
Every combustion reaction we deal with produces gas with oxygen in the product, so O2 (oxygen gas) must be a reactant. For example, methane reacts with Oxygen in this way: CH4(l) + O2(g) -> C02(g)+2H2(g) Note O2 in gaseous form as a reactant.
999 g
Something that reacts to another substance.
The answer is 8,64 g.
no thats completely stupid. butane reacts with oxygen to produce carbon dioxide and water
The limiting reactant is chlorine.
oxygen reacts with iron and forms rust Oxygen reacts with iron to form iron oxide.
20.8