Transcript 12_3 review
12.3 Limiting Reagent and
Percent Yield
B Y:
MICHELLE ALICE GANIAN
Limiting Reagent
In a chemical reaction, an insufficient quantity of any of the reactants will
limit the amount of product that is formed.
(In terms of ingredients, the smallest amount you have of the ingredients
will be the limiting reagent, because it is the substance that will limit the
amount of the recipe.)
Limiting Reagent-the reagent that determines the amount of product that
can be formed by the reaction. When the limiting reagent is used up, the
chemical reaction is over.
Excess reagent-the reaction that is not completely used up in an equation.
Finding the Limiting Reagent
How many grams of metallic copper can be obtained when 54g
Al react with 319g of CuSO4?
2Al + 3CuSO4 1Al2(SO4)3 + 3Cu
What is the limiting reagent?
Step 1: Change grams to moles to find the limiting reagent
54g Al x 1 mole Al/27g Al = 2 mole Al (you have 2Al in the equation)
319g CuSO4 x I mole CuSO4/159.5g CuSO4 = 2 mole CuSO4
Using the Limiting Reagent
How many grams of metallic copper can be obtained when 54g
Al react with 319g of CuSO4?
Step 2: Continue the problem by using the founded limiting
reagent to solve for the quantity of the product
Limiting reagent = 2 mole CuSO4
2 mole CuSO4 x 3 mole Cu/3 mole CuSO4 x 63.5g Cu/1 mole Cu =
127g Cu
Percent Yield
Actual yield - the amount of product that actually forms
when a reaction is carried out in a lab
Theoretical yield- the maximum amount of product that
can be formed from given amounts of reactants
Percent yield – the ratio of the actual yield to the
theoretical yield expressed as a percent.
Calculating Theoretical Yield
What is the theoretical yield of CaO if 24.8g of CaCO3 is
heated?
CaCO3 CaO3 + CO2
Given mass CaCO3 = 24.8g
Molar mass CaCO3 = 100.1 g
Molar mass CaO = 56.1g
Theoretical yield is unknown.
24.8g CaCO3 x 1 mole CaCO3/100.1g CaCO3 x 1 mole CaO/1 mole
CaCO3 x 56.1g CaO/ 1 mole CaO = 13.9g CaO
Calculating for Percent Yield
What is the percent yield if 13.1g CaO is actually produced
when 24.8g CaCO3 is heated?
(You don’t need 24.8 g CaCO3)
Percent yield = actual yield/theoretical yield x 100%
Percent yield =13.1g CaO/13.9g CaO x 100% = 94.2
Hint: the larger number always goes as the denominator