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🧪 Using Moles — Calculations and Limiting Reactants

Spec 5.3.2.3–5.3.2.4 📙 Higher
📖 In-Depth Theory

Using Moles to Calculate Concentration

CONCENTRATION in mol/dm³ (molar concentration):
concentration (mol/dm³) = moles (mol) ÷ volume (dm³)
Rearranging:
moles = concentration × volume
volume = moles ÷ concentration
Remember: 1 dm³ = 1000 cm³. Convert cm³ to dm³ by dividing by 1000.
EXAMPLES:
0.5 mol of NaOH dissolved in 250 cm³:
V = 250 ÷ 1000 = 0.25 dm³
c = 0.5 ÷ 0.25 = 2 mol/dm³
How many moles in 100 cm³ of 2 mol/dm³ HCl?
V = 100 ÷ 1000 = 0.1 dm³
n = 2 × 0.1 = 0.2 mol
USING TITRATION DATA:
If 25.0 cm³ of NaOH is neutralised by 20.0 cm³ of 0.1 mol/dm³ HCl:
n(HCl) = 0.1 × 0.020 = 0.002 mol
NaOH + HCl → NaCl + H₂O (1:1 ratio)
n(NaOH) = 0.002 mol
c(NaOH) = 0.002 ÷ 0.025 = 0.08 mol/dm³

Limiting Reactants

In a reaction, the LIMITING REACTANT is the reactant that is completely used up first — it determines how much product forms.
The other reactant is in EXCESS — some of it remains unreacted.
IDENTIFYING THE LIMITING REACTANT:
Calculate moles of each reactant.
Compare to the molar ratio from the balanced equation.
The reactant that runs out first (relative to the ratio) is the LIMITING reactant.
EXAMPLE:
Mg + 2HCl → MgCl₂ + H₂
2.4 g of Mg and 3.65 g of HCl are mixed.
n(Mg) = 2.4 ÷ 24 = 0.1 mol
n(HCl) = 3.65 ÷ 36.5 = 0.1 mol
For complete reaction: 0.1 mol Mg needs 0.2 mol HCl.
Only 0.1 mol HCl available → HCl is the LIMITING REACTANT.
Product is determined by limiting reactant:
n(H₂) = n(HCl) ÷ 2 = 0.05 mol
mass(H₂) = 0.05 × 2 = 0.1 g

Using Moles to Balance Equations

EMPIRICAL FORMULA from masses or percentages:
Convert % or masses to moles (divide by Ar).
Find the simplest whole number ratio.
Write the empirical formula.
EXAMPLE:
4.0 g sulfur + 4.0 g oxygen react to form an oxide.
n(S) = 4.0 ÷ 32 = 0.125 mol
n(O) = 4.0 ÷ 16 = 0.25 mol
Ratio S:O = 0.125 : 0.25 = 1 : 2
Empirical formula = SO₂
MOLECULAR FORMULA from empirical formula:
Divide molecular mass by empirical formula mass.
Multiply empirical formula by this factor.
Example: empirical formula CH₂ (mass 14). Molecular mass = 56.
Factor = 56 ÷ 14 = 4. Molecular formula = C₄H₈.
⚠️ Common Mistake

The LIMITING REACTANT is the one that runs out — not the one in smaller quantity. You must compare the RATIO of moles available to the RATIO NEEDED from the equation. A large excess of one reactant does not make it the limiting reactant — only the molar comparison matters.

📐 Variables
cConcentration (c) is measured in mol/dm³ (mol/dm³)
nMoles (n) is measured in mol (mol)
VVolume (V) is measured in dm³ (dm³)
📐 Key Equations
c (mol/dm³) = n (mol) ÷ V (dm³)
n = c × V
Empirical formula: divide masses by Ar → find simplest ratio
📌 Key Note

c (mol/dm³) = n ÷ V (V in dm³). Limiting reactant: convert to moles → compare to equation ratio → whichever runs out first limits yield. Empirical formula: masses → moles → simplest ratio. Molecular formula: divide Mr by empirical mass → multiply.

🎯 Matching Activity — Moles Calculations Match

Match each calculation to the correct answer. — drag the symbols on the right to match the component names on the left.

c = ? mol/dm³: 0.2 mol in 500 cm³
Drop here
n = ? mol: 2 mol/dm³, 250 cm³
Drop here
Limiting reactant: Mg + 2HCl; 0.1 mol Mg, 0.1 mol HCl
Drop here
Empirical formula: S 50%, O 50% by mass
Drop here
0.5 mol — n = 2 × 0.25
HCl is limiting — 0.1 mol Mg needs 0.2 mol HCl, only 0.1 available
SO — n(S)=50/32=1.56, n(O)=50/16=3.12, ratio 1:2 → SO₂ wait: 1.56:3.12 = 1:2 → SO₂
0.4 mol/dm³ — c = 0.2 ÷ 0.5
⚽ FIFA Worked Examples
Limiting Reactant

2.4 g Mg reacts with 3.65 g HCl. Mg + 2HCl → MgCl₂ + H₂. Identify the limiting reactant and calculate mass of H₂ produced. Ar: Mg=24, H=1, Cl=35.5.

F

n = mass ÷ Mr for each reactant; compare to equation ratio

I

n(Mg) = 2.4 ÷ 24 = 0.1 mol. n(HCl) = 3.65 ÷ 36.5 = 0.1 mol. Equation needs Mg:HCl = 1:2. 0.1 mol Mg needs 0.2 mol HCl — only 0.1 available.

F

HCl is limiting. n(H₂) = 0.1 ÷ 2 = 0.05 mol. mass(H₂) = 0.05 × 2

A

0.1 g of H₂ produced. HCl is the limiting reactant.

🎯 Test Yourself
Question 1 of 2
1. What is the concentration of a solution made by dissolving 0.3 mol of KOH in 300 cm³ of water?
2. A student mixes 0.1 mol Na with 0.05 mol Cl₂. 2Na + Cl₂ → 2NaCl. Which is the limiting reactant?
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