I always recommend you follow these 6 steps in all stoichiometry problems (or a least some variation of them)
(1) write balanced equations
(2) convert everything given to moles
(3) determine limiting reagent
(4) convert moles limiting reagent to moles of other species
(5) convert moles back to mass... this is the theoretical mass
(6) % yield = (actual mass recovered / theoretical mass) * 100%
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as to step (3), there are 3 common methods of determining the limiting reagent
(method #1).. choose 1 reactant. Determine the amount of the other reactant(s)
needed to complete consume the reactant you picked. If you have
less than enough of the other reactant, the other reactant is the L.R.
If you have XS "other reactant" the reactant you chose originally is
the L.R.
(method #2).. divide moles available by coefficients of the balanced equation for
each reactant the smallest ratio belongs to the limiting reagent
(method #3).. convert all reactants to 1 product (steps 2, 4, and 5 combined).
Whichever gives the least amount of product is the L.R. and that
is the theoretical yield of that product.
you chose a rather unique variation of method #1. Methods #2 or #3 would have worked much better. And you didn't need to fret over the balanced equation. Let me demonstrate
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first steps 1 and 2
2Al(s) + 6H2O(l) + 2NaOH(aq) --> 2AL(OH)4- + 2Na(aq)+ + 3H2 (g)
moles Al available = 41.28g * (1mol/26.982g) = 1.5298
moles NaOH available = 49.92g *(1mol/39.997g) = 1.2481
moles H2O available ≈ 510 mL * (1g/1mL) * (1mol / 18.02g) = 28.3
method #1..
I choose Al
moles NaOH needed. 1.5298 mol Al * (2 mol NaOH / 2 mol Al) = 1.5298 mol NaOH
moles H2O needed. 1.5298 mol Al * (6 mol H2O / 2 mol Al) = 4.5894 mol H2O
since I have
LESS moles of NaOH available than I need to completely consume all the Al
MORE moles of H2O available than I need to completely consume all the Al
therefore the NaOH is the limiting reagent.
method #2
ratios of moles available to coefficients of balanced equation
Al ratio = 1.5298 / 2 = 0.7649
NaOH ratio = 1.2481 / 2 = 0.6240
H2O ratio = 28.3 / 6 = 4.72
since NaOH ratio < Al ratio < H2O ratio, the NaOH is the limiting reagent
both those methods require completing steps 4 and (we can skip 5) next
to finish the problem
1.2481 mol Al * (3 mol H2 / 2 mol Al) = 1.872 mol H2
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method #3 is a bit different, we start with the balanced equation, then complete steps 2, and 4 (and 5 if needed) in 1 dimensional analysis equation for EACH reactant. Whichever gives the least amount of H2 is the L.R and that is the theoretical yield.
and here's how that works... you start with the balanced equation
step (1)
2Al(s) + 6H2O(l) + 2NaOH(aq) --> 2AL(OH)4- + 2Na(aq)+ + 3H2 (g)
then steps (2) and (4) combined.... (or 2+4+5 combined if mass is needed)
IF Al is the LR
41.28 g Al 1 mol Al 3 mol H2
----------- x ------------- x ----------- = 2.295 mol H2
1 26.984g Al 2 mol Al
IF NaOH is the LR
49.92 g NaOH 1 mol NaOH 3 mol H2
---------------- x ----------------- x --------------- = 1.872 mol H2
1 39.997g NaOH 2 mol NaOH
IF H2O is the LR
510 g H2PO 1 mol H2O 3 mol H2
-------------- x -------------- x --------------- = 14.15 mol H2
1 18.02g H2O 6 mol H2O
then step(3)
since NaOH gave the least amount of H2, it is the LR
and the theoretical yield of H2 = 1.872 mol
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method #1 breaks down for determining LR for more than 2 reactants
method #2 works very well.. but it's not as compact as method #3...
method #3.. the holy grail of stoichiometric methods. . <---- your goal!!!