Question
When 1 mole of nitrogen gas (N2) reacts with 3 moles of hydrogen gas (H2), how many moles of ammonia (NH3) are produced?(1 point)
Responses
1 mole
1 mole
2 moles
2 moles
3 moles
3 moles
4 moles
Responses
1 mole
1 mole
2 moles
2 moles
3 moles
3 moles
4 moles
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The reaction between nitrogen gas (N₂) and hydrogen gas (H₂) to produce ammonia (NH₃) can be represented by the balanced chemical equation:
\[ N_2 + 3H_2 \rightarrow 2NH_3 \]
From the balanced equation, we see that:
- 1 mole of nitrogen (N₂) reacts with 3 moles of hydrogen (H₂) to produce 2 moles of ammonia (NH₃).
Given that you start with 1 mole of nitrogen gas and 3 moles of hydrogen gas, you will produce **2 moles of ammonia (NH₃)**.
So the correct response is:
**2 moles**.
\[ N_2 + 3H_2 \rightarrow 2NH_3 \]
From the balanced equation, we see that:
- 1 mole of nitrogen (N₂) reacts with 3 moles of hydrogen (H₂) to produce 2 moles of ammonia (NH₃).
Given that you start with 1 mole of nitrogen gas and 3 moles of hydrogen gas, you will produce **2 moles of ammonia (NH₃)**.
So the correct response is:
**2 moles**.
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