Step 1 — Identify the mole ratio from the balanced equation
From the balanced equation: 2 Na + Cl₂ → 2 NaCl. The mole ratio between Na and NaCl is 2 mol Na : 2 mol NaCl, which simplifies to 1 : 1.
Step 2 — Convert given moles of Na to moles of NaCl
Because the stoichiometric ratio is 1:1, 2.0 moles Na will produce 2.0 moles NaCl (Cl₂ is in excess so Na is the limiting reagent).
Step 3 — Calculate the molar mass of NaCl
Use standard atomic masses (approximate): Na = 22.99 g·mol⁻¹, Cl = 35.45 g·mol⁻¹.
Molar mass of NaCl = 22.99 + 35.45 = 58.44 g·mol⁻¹.
Step 4 — Convert moles of NaCl to grams
Mass = (moles) × (molar mass) = 2.0 mol × 58.44 g·mol⁻¹ = 116.88 g.
Step 5 — Significant figures and final reporting
• The given quantity 2.0 mol has 2 significant figures. • Molar masses (22.99 and 35.45) are typically given to four significant figures, but the final result should generally reflect the least precise measured value (here 2.0 has 2 s.f.). • Therefore you may report the theoretical yield as:
Quick check
• Mole ratio 1:1 ⟹ moles Na = moles NaCl (2.0 mol). • 2.0 × 58.44 ≈ 116.9 g — consistent and dimensionally correct.
20 mL of sodium iodide solution gave 4.74 g silver iodide when treated with excess of silver nitrate solution. The molarity of the sodium iodide solution is _____ M. (Nearest Integer value) (Given : Na = 23, I = 127, Ag = 108, N = 14, O = 16 g mol$^{-1}$)
X g of nitrobenzene on nitration gave 4.2 g of m-dinitrobenzene. X =_____ g. (nearest integer) [Given : molar mass (in g mol\(^{-1}\)) C : 12, H : 1, O : 16, N : 14]