Hello Dolphinsiu,
You are getting there... Chuckle .. dont subtract your numbers yet.. it gets confusing when that happens
To help you visualize what is happening, use one of your 'Input' moles, and balance the equation.. For example, I'll use Glucose input first:
444.4 C6H12O6 + 444.4 NH3 + 666.6 O2 --->444.4 C5H9NO4 + 444.4 CO2 + 1333.2 H2O
This means that 444.4 moles of glucose and ammonia along with 666.6 moles of O2 will produce 444.4 moles of C5H9NO4 and CO2, while producing 1333.2 moles of H2O.
For arguments sake, lets say that you only put in 200 moles of Ammonia (NH4), then this reaction would not work. We would need to place 200 moles of ammonia into the equation and then perform the calcuation. In this case, ammonia would be our limiting-reagent, or the lowest number of moles which balances our equation.
Ok .. now that I provided an example, its your turn to solve for the limiting reagent.
Cheers,
Eugene