I have a problem that I can solve in two ways, each of which lead to different answers, and would like an opinion on which is more justified.
Consider the reaction
Al2S3 + 6HCl → 2AlCl3 + 3H2S .
How much AlCl3 can be formed from 109.35g HCl?
- not enough information
- six moles
- one mole
- two moles
- twelve moles
- three moles
- four moles
Assuming you have Al
2S
3 in excess, the answer would be [3. one mole], because
[tex]\mathrm{109.35g\,HCl \times \frac{1\,mol\,HCl}{36.46\,g\,HCl} \times \frac{2\,mol\,AlCl_{3}}{6\,mol\,HCl}\approx1\,mol\,AlCl_{3}}[/tex].
However, I don't feel that would be correct because the problem doesn't tell you to treat Al
2S
3 as an excess reactant. Since you might have a limiting amount of it, you might not be able to fully react all of the HCl.
Therefore [1. not enough information] would be the answer.
Should I treat Al
2S
3 as an excess reactant even though it's not stated as such by the problem? If so, is this something that a chemistry student would always assume in similar problems i.e. is this the way things are done in chemistry?