I'm trying to figure out how many moles of Cl2 are in the product side of this equation:
2HMnO4+ 14HCl --> 2MnCl2+ 5Cl2+ 8H2O
I know that the HCl is the limiting reactant and 2MnCl2 is 0.5714285714 moles, but how do I figure out how many moles are in the Cl2 part of the 2MnCl2???
There is some confusion here I think. If the question asks for how much Cl
2 is formed, this is normally read to mean how much diatomic chlorine is formed. The Cl
2 in MnCl
2 is two chlorides, not diatomic chlorine.
You can use this simple formula
# of Moles = Mass in grams divided by Molar Mass
=5o divided by (cl x 2)
=50 divided by 71
=0.704 moles
How did you come to the conclusion that 50 g of Cl
2 are formed? I think your answer is wrong.
Uma's approach is the simplest. If you know how much MnCl
2 is formed, you can calculate how much Cl
2 is formed using simple stoichiometry.