cdornz Posted February 24, 2013 Posted February 24, 2013 (edited) I am trying to find the theoretical yield and percent yield in nitrotoluene. The question: Exactly 4.0 mL of toluene (density = 0.87 g/mL) were reacted with excess nitric acid in the presence of excess sulfuric acid, and 3.6 g of nitrotoluene were obtained. So I started with the balanced equation: C7H8 + HNO3 --> C7H7NO2 + H2O Then I calculated the grams of toluene: 4.0mL * 0.87g/mL = 3.48g C7H8 Then I calculated the moles of toluene: 3.48g * 1 mole/92.138g = 0.038 mole C7H8 Then I calculated the moles of nitrotoluene: 3.6g * 1 mole/137.136g = 0.026 mole C7H7NO2 This equation is a 1:1 ratio so I can't multiply by anything, so trying to find the limiting reactant is throwing me off especially since I don't know how much nitric acid is being used. Any suggestions on how to proceed? Edited February 24, 2013 by cdornz
BabcockHall Posted February 25, 2013 Posted February 25, 2013 The problem specified that nitric acid and sulfuric acid were in excess (sulfuric was probably a catalyst, anyway). Therefore they cannot be limiting reagents by the assumptions of the problem.
Knumbnuts Posted February 28, 2013 Posted February 28, 2013 According to the equation 0.038 mol toluene should produce 0.038 mol nitrotoluene. You obtained 0.026mol nitrotoluene, so what is the actual yield in % and what is the theoretical yield in grams of nitrotoluene?
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