A bottle containing 1,665 g of sulfuric acid (H2SO4, 98.08 g/mol) was spilled in a laboratory. The emergency spill kit contained a full 2.0 kg bottle of sodium carbonate (105.99 g/mol). Is this enough sodium carbonate to neutralize the acid, according to the following reaction

H2SO4(aq) + Na2CO3(s) → Na2SO4(aq) + CO2(g) + H2O(l)

A. Yes, there is more than enough sodium carbonate.
B. Yes, there is exactly enough sodium carbonate-but no excess.
C. No, there is not enough sodium carbonate, but the amount is only about 10% too small.
D. No, there is not nearly enough sodium carbonate.
E. No, the reaction will start going backwards.

Respuesta :

Answer:

A. Yes, there is more than enough sodium carbonate.

Explanation:

Hello,

In this case, based on the given reaction which is:

[tex]H_2SO_4(aq) + Na_2CO_3(s) \rightarrow Na_2SO_4(aq) + CO_2(g) + H_2O(l)[/tex]

By stoichiometry, one computes the grams of sodium carbonate that will neutralize 1,665 g of sulfuric acid as shown below:

[tex]1,665gH_2SO_4*\frac{1molH_2SO_4}{98.08gH_2SO_4}*\frac{1molNa_2CO_3}{1molH_2SO_4} *\frac{105.99gNa_2CO_3}{1molNa_2CO_3}*\frac{1kgNa_2CO_3}{1000gNa_2CO_3}\\m_{Na_2CO_3}=1.80gNa_2CO_3[/tex]

Thus, the available mass is 2.0 kg so 0.2 kg are in excess, therefore: A. Yes, there is more than enough sodium carbonate.

Best regards.