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Intermediate — requires conceptual clarity in identifying limiting reagents and multi-step calculations involving mole conversions and yield.
Question: How many moles of water are produced when 2 moles of hydrogen gas react with 1 mole of oxygen gas? A. 1 mol B. 2 mol C. 3 mol D. 4 mol Answer: B Explanation: From 2H? + O?-2H?O, 2 mol H? produces 2 mol H?O. Why others fail: Option A assumes 1:1 ratio without checking stoichiometry.
Question: What is the mass of ammonia produced when 14 g N? reacts with excess H (N? + 3H?-2NH?) A. 17 g B. 34 g C. 8.5 g D. 3.4 g Answer: A Explanation: 14 g N? = 0.5 mol-produces 1 mol NH? = 17 g. Why others fail: Option B doubles the correct answer, assuming 1 mol N? gives 2 mol NH? but misusing mass.
Question: 3 g of H? reacts with 28 g of N?. Which is the limiting reagent? (N? + 3H?-2NH?) A. N? B. H? C. Both are limiting D. Neither is limiting Answer: B Explanation: Moles H? = 1.5, moles N? = 1; required H? for 1 mol N? = 3 mol, but only 1.5 mol H?-H? limiting. Why others fail: Option A is tempting if comparing masses directly (3 g vs 28 g).
Question: A reaction has a theoretical yield of 50 g, but only 40 g is obtained. What is the percentage yield? A. 80% B. 90% C. 75% D. 85% Answer: A Explanation: (40/50) × 100 = 80%. Why others fail: Option C is common error from incorrect division (40/50 = 0.75).
Question: Calcium carbonate decomposes: CaCO?-CaO + CO?. If 50 g of impure CaCO? (80% pure) is heated, what is the mass of CO? produced? A. 17.6 g B. 22 g C. 13.2 g D. 8.8 g Answer: A Explanation: Pure CaCO? = 40 g = 0.4 mol-produces 0.4 mol CO? = 0.4 × 44 = 17.6 g. Why others fail: Option B assumes 50 g pure CaCO?-1 mol CO? without adjusting for purity.
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