How Do You Determine the Limiting Reagent in Molar Enthalpy Calculations?

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The discussion focuses on using Hess's Law to determine the total enthalpy change for reactions involving magnesium and hydrochloric acid. The user plans to measure temperature changes for two reactions: magnesium with hydrochloric acid and magnesium oxide with hydrochloric acid. They seek clarification on identifying the limiting reagent, which affects the calculations for enthalpy change using the formula q=mcΔT. For the first reaction, they need to determine the moles of magnesium to use in their calculations, while for the second reaction, they are unsure which reactant's mass and moles to apply. Understanding the limiting reagent is crucial for accurate molar enthalpy calculations in both reactions.
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Okay so I think I know what I'm doing, but I have a lab tommorow and I have to use Hess's Law to find the total enthalpy change of Mg(s)+1/2O2(g)-->MgO(s). I know how to do that but during my lab tommorow I have to find the enthalpy change of 2 reactions. First, Mg(S)+2HCL(aq)-->H2(g)+MgCl2(aq), using 0.5g of magnesium and 100.0 ml of 1.00 mol/L. So, I should record the temperature change of the original HCl, then the temperature of the MgCl2 afterwords and record the temperature change (this is a high school lab, so it doesn't matter that some energy is lost to surroundings). I understand all the formulas but I'm confused which one is the limiting reagent, which would influence which one I use in the q=mcΔT and which value I would use for the amount of moles. So, from what I have so far, I have ΔH(sol)=(0.5g+100.0g)(4.18 J/g°C)(ΔT)/the moles of the Mg, which is 0.021 (assuming the specific heat capacity of HCl is 4.18 J/g°c)

Also, same question for the nest equation, MgO(s)+2HCl(aq)-->H2O(l) + MgCl2(aq)... which value should I use for m and which for the n?

Sorry for the long question, but thanks for any input. I know the text is long, but to sum it up, how do you decide in a chemical reaction which reactant to use in the molar enthalpy equations to find the correct molar enthalpy? Thank you.
 
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Sorry, for the second equation, there is 1.0g magnesium oxide and 100.0 mL of 1.00 mol/L HCl.
 
Calculate how much HCl is needed for a 1g of Mg to react. If what you get is less than the amount of HCl present, Mg is a limiting reagent. If what you get is more than the amount of HCl present, HCl is the limiting reagent.
 
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