Respuesta :
Answer:
[tex]\rm Cl_2 + 2\; KBr \to Br_2 + 2\; KCl[/tex].
One chlorine molecule reacts with two formula units of (aqueous) potassium bromide to produce one bromine molecule and two formula units of (aqueous) potassium chloride.
Explanation:
Formula for each of the species
Start by finding the formula for each of the compound.
- Both chlorine [tex]\rm Cl[/tex] and bromine [tex]\rm Br[/tex] are group 17 elements (halogens.) Each
- On the other hand, potassium [tex]\rm K[/tex] is a group 1 element (alkaline metal.) Each
Therefore, the ratio between [tex]\rm K[/tex] atoms and [tex]\rm Br[/tex] atoms in potassium bromide is supposed to be one-to-one. That corresponds to the empirical formula [tex]\rm KBr[/tex]. Similarly, the ratio between
The formula for chlorine gas is [tex]\rm Cl_2[/tex], while the formula for bromine gas is [tex]\rm Br_2[/tex].
Balanced equation for the reaction
Write down the equation using these chemical formulas.
[tex]\rm ?\; Cl_2 + ?\; KBr \to ?\;Br_2 + ?\; KCl[/tex].
Start by assuming that the coefficient of compound with the largest number of elements is one. In this particular equation, both [tex]\rm KBr[/tex] and [tex]\rm KCl[/tex] features two elements each.
Assume that the coefficient of [tex]\rm KCl[/tex] is one. Hence:
[tex]\rm ?\; Cl_2 + 1 \; KBr \to ?\;Br_2 + ?\; KCl[/tex].
Note that [tex]\rm KBr[/tex] is the only source of [tex]\rm K[/tex] and [tex]\rm Br[/tex] atoms among the reactants of this reaction.
There would thus be one [tex]\rm K[/tex] atom and one [tex]\rm Br[/tex] atom on the reactant side of the equation.
Because atoms are conserved in a chemical equation, there should be the same number of [tex]\rm K[/tex] and [tex]\rm Br[/tex] atoms on the product side of the equation.
In this reaction, [tex]\rm Br_2[/tex] is the only product with [tex]\rm Br[/tex] atoms.
One [tex]\rm Br[/tex] atom would correspond to [tex]0.5[/tex] units of [tex]\rm Br_2[/tex].
Similarly, in this reaction, [tex]\rm KCl[/tex] is the only product with [tex]\rm K[/tex] atoms.
One [tex]\rm K[/tex] atom would correspond to one formula unit of [tex]\rm KCl[/tex].
Hence:
[tex]\displaystyle \rm ?\; Cl_2 + 1 \; KBr \to \frac{1}{2}\;Br_2 + 1\; KCl[/tex].
Similarly, there should be exactly one [tex]\rm Cl[/tex] atom on either side of this equation. The coefficient of [tex]\rm Cl_2[/tex] should thus be [tex]0.5[/tex]. Hence:
[tex]\displaystyle \rm \frac{1}{2}\; Cl_2 + 1 \; KBr \to \frac{1}{2}\;Br_2 + 1\; KCl[/tex].
That does not meet the requirements, because two of these coefficients are not integers. Multiply all these coefficients by two (the least common multiple- LCM- of these two denominators) to obtain:
[tex]\displaystyle \rm 1\; Cl_2 + 2 \; KBr \to 1\;Br_2 + 2\; KCl[/tex].