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23 May, 06:07

Strontium chloride reacts with lithium phosphate to produce strontium phosphate and lithium chloride. What mass (in grams) of lithium chloride forms when 218.3 g of lithium phosphate is used (strontium chloride is in excess). Hint: Write a balanced chemical equation.

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  1. 23 May, 06:35
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    239.8 g

    Explanation:

    This is a problem which involves stoichiometry calculations.

    Every time we are to make a calculation based on a chemical reaction we do need to have it balanced:

    SrCl₂ + Li₃PO₄ ⇒ LiCl + Sr₃ (PO₄) ₂ (Double decomposition reaction)

    We need two phophate in the reactants and that will give us 6 Li we balance in the products and the rest of the coefficients we will follow:

    3 SrCl₂ + 2 Li₃PO₄ ⇒ 6 LiCl + Sr₃ (PO₄) ₂

    Now we can compute the moles of Li₃PO₄ that are going to react with the excess SrCl₂.

    From there we will calculate the moles of LiCl formed, and hence its mass by multiplying by its molar mass.

    Molar Mass Li₃PO₄ = 115.79 g/mol

    moles Li₃PO₄ = 218.3 g / 115.79 g/mol = 1.885 mol

    moles LiCl formed from the stoichiometry of the reaction:

    1.885 mol Li₃PO₄ x (6 mol LiCl / 2 mol Li₃PO₄) = 5.656 mol Li₃PO₄

    molar mass LiCl = 42.39 g/mol

    mass LiCl formed:

    5.656 mol x 42.39 g/mol = 239.8 g

    (rounded to 4 significant figures since we had 4 significant figures in the mass of 218.3 g of Li₃PO₄)
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