DraconisV said:
Ok, I have done this question. I now have came up with the answer of 1.38g of Silver Carbonate formed. Can someone please check this for me. and IF i'm wrong can they please shwo me how its done? but im preety confident.
DraconisV
Sorry to say, that's incorrect. I triple checked to make sure I didn't make a mistake. I'm sorry for taking so long to notice the question.
You have probably already figured it out but anyway, the equation is:
2AgNO3(aq) + Na2CO3(aq) → Ag2CO3(s) + 2NaNO3(aq)
We have 0.025 x 0.2 = 0.005 moles of AgNO
3.
We have 0.030 x 0.15 = 0.0045 moles of Na
2CO
3.
You'd probably look at it and think that AgNO
3 is in excess, but if you look at the balanced equation, the molar ratio of AgNO
3 to Na
2CO
3 is 2:1.
This means that every mole of Na
2CO
3 will react with
2 moles of AgNO
3.
That would mean we need 0.0045 x 2 = 0.009 moles of AgNO
3, but we only have 0.005 moles. Hence Na
2CO
3 is in excess.
The molar ratio of AgNO
3:Na
2CO
3:Ag
2CO
3 is 2:1:1, which is 0.005:0.0025:0.0025 as we have only 0.005 moles of AgNO
3.
Molar mass of Ag
2CO
3 is 107.9 x 2 + 12 + 16 x 3 = 275.8 g
The mass of the Ag
2CO
3 is then 275.8 x 0.0025 = 0.69 (2 d.p).