Hi,
In my textbook, they offer a quite complicated way of finding the limiting reactant. I think I may have found a simple way of discovering it but I want to make sure it works first.
The question:
What is the maximum mass of PCl
3 that can be obtained from 125g P
4 and 323g Cl
2?
P
4(s) + 6Cl
2(g)
4PCl
3(l)
My answer:
Of course you have to find the number of moles of limiting reactant, convert to moles of PCl
3, then convert to grams of. I did the procedure that the textbook laid out and I found some parts to be unnecessary. Here's what I tried: get number of moles of both reactants (to get a standardized measure of quantity), then divide each reactant by their mole ratio in the formula. The smaller number of "moles" between the two reactants must be limiting. Is this theory correct?
125g P
4 1.01mol P
4 / 1 = 1.01mol P
4323g Cl
2 4.56mol Cl
2 / 6 = 0.759mol Cl
2Therefore Cl
2 is limiting. An analogy that I thought of was if you had to build a cube requiring 2 red sides and 4 black sides. If you had 30 red sides, and 64 black sides, then you can only produce 15 boxes- red is completely used and black is in excess.
30 red / 2 = 15
64 black / 4 = 16
Therefore red is limiting.
The textbook's way:
Get moles of P
4 and Cl
2, calculate a mole ratio by dividing moles of Cl
2 and P
4. Next if the calculated mole ratio is < 6/1 then Cl
2 is limiting, and if the mole ratio is > 6/1 then P
4 is limiting.
It seems like the textbook's way requires memorizing of which reactant goes where in the mole ratio, and the > and < might get confusing.
Thanks and please let me know if my method is valid