Stoichiometry and Limiting Reagent problems
I was practicing limiting reagent problems. The question I was practicing was:
How many grams what Ag is produced?
19.0g Cu
125g AgNO3
Cu + 2AgNO3 ----> 2Ag + Cu(NO3)2
I discovered that Cu was the limiting reagent and I thought I remembered that we are supposed to use the limiting reagent to determine the moles and then grams of the product. I did so by multiplying the moles of Cu by the mole ratio of 2 moles of Ag for every 1 mole of Cu, giving me 0.598 mol Ag and the resulting mass was 64.5g Ag.
Then, I thought to myself that there is no Ag present in our limiting agent - what difference would I see if I used our excess reagent? So I did the math on converting our given mass of 125g AgNO3 to moles, then converting moles of AgNO3 to moles of Ag, and finally to 79.4g Ag.
That's a difference of 14.9g compared to the mass calculated using the limiting reagent value.
So my questions are:
1. Is it wrong to use the excess reagent in any case to calculate the mass of the product?
2. How does it make sense to use the value of a reactant molecule that doesn't contain any element in the product we are being asked to define?
3. Why is there such a difference between the resulting mass using the values of the limiting reagent and the excess reagent?
Thank you for your time!
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