It depends on how and where the reaction takes place. Aluminium chloride is unstable in the prescence of water and reacts to give a variety of hydroxy-chlorides or hydroxide, or hydrated complex salts. With no water present, there is likely to be a complex salt formed.
In this reaction, the limiting reactant is whichever reactant is completely consumed first and limits the amount of product that can be formed. To determine the limiting reactant, you would need to compare the stoichiometry of the reactants. The reactant that provides the least amount of product based on the balanced equation is the limiting reactant.
In the reaction between magnesium (Mg) and hydrochloric acid (HCl), the limiting reactant is the reactant that is consumed first, which determines the maximum amount of product that can be formed. To determine the limiting reactant, you would need to compare the moles of magnesium and hydrochloric acid to see which one is present in the lowest stoichiometric amount.
Balanced equation first.Zn + 2HCl --> ZnCl2 + H20.5 mole Zn (2 moles HCl/1 mole Zn)= 1 mole HCl================you do not have this much moles HCl0.75 moles HCl (1 mole Zn/2 mole HCl)= 0.375 moles Zn===================you have more moles Zn than thisSo. HCl limits this reaction.
The limiting reactant is the reactant that is completely consumed in a chemical reaction. In this case, you would need to compare the moles of each reactant to see which one is completely used up first. Whichever reactant is present in the lowest stoichiometric amount is the limiting reactant.
it depends if it is on the reactant side or product side. BUTTT in this case, I am assuming HCL is a solid.which whether or not it is on the reactant or product side, there would be NO CHANGE.
In this reaction, the limiting reactant is whichever reactant is completely consumed first and limits the amount of product that can be formed. To determine the limiting reactant, you would need to compare the stoichiometry of the reactants. The reactant that provides the least amount of product based on the balanced equation is the limiting reactant.
In the reaction between magnesium (Mg) and hydrochloric acid (HCl), the limiting reactant is the reactant that is consumed first, which determines the maximum amount of product that can be formed. To determine the limiting reactant, you would need to compare the moles of magnesium and hydrochloric acid to see which one is present in the lowest stoichiometric amount.
The HCl is hydrochloric acid
It depends upon nature of reactant and conditions.
Balanced equation first.Zn + 2HCl --> ZnCl2 + H20.5 mole Zn (2 moles HCl/1 mole Zn)= 1 mole HCl================you do not have this much moles HCl0.75 moles HCl (1 mole Zn/2 mole HCl)= 0.375 moles Zn===================you have more moles Zn than thisSo. HCl limits this reaction.
In some reactions water is a reactant, but in others it is a product. Ex: HCl + NaOH --> NaCl + water (water is a product) Na + water --> NaOH + hydrogen gas (water is a reactant)
The limiting reactant is the reactant that is completely consumed in a chemical reaction. In this case, you would need to compare the moles of each reactant to see which one is completely used up first. Whichever reactant is present in the lowest stoichiometric amount is the limiting reactant.
it depends if it is on the reactant side or product side. BUTTT in this case, I am assuming HCL is a solid.which whether or not it is on the reactant or product side, there would be NO CHANGE.
There is no NaCl2. It would simply be NaCl and the reactant would be HCl and NaOH. Thus,HCl + NaOH ==> NaCl + H2O
Water can be either a reactant, or a product. It really depends on the type of chemical equation. Here are examples of both water being on the reactant side, and the product side. Reactants 2H2O ===> 2H2 + O2 HCl + H2O ===> Cl- + H3O+ Products CH4 + 2O2 ===> CO2 + 2H2O 2H2O2 ===> 2H2O + O2
2NaOHaq + 2HClaq --> 2NaClaq + H2Ol is the perfect balanced equatiion,except the solubility (aq) of NaCl, so it is notNaCls but NaClaq
The reaction equation with conventional capitalization is: Al(OH)3 + 3 HCl -> AlCl3 + 3 H2O. The gram formula unit masses are 78.00 for aluminum hydroxide, 133.34 for aluminum chloride, 36.46 for hydrogen chloride, and 18.015 for water. Therefore, the relative mass ratios are (78.00) to [3(18.015)] or about 1.443 for the ratio of the two reactants. The mass ratio of the specified available amounts of the two reactants is 385/256 or about 1.503, which is greater than the theoretical amount. Therefore, the limiting reactant is HCl. The stoichiometric reactant mass ratio of aluminum chloride to hydrogen chloride is about 133.34/(3)(36.46) or about 1.219. Therefore, a fully reacted amount of 256 g of hydrogen chloride will produce about (1.219)(256) or about 312 g of aluminum chloride. (The provided data for masses has three significant digits, so that the answer should also have three significant digits.)