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Chapter 12 Chemical Quantities 12.2 Using Moles
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Chapter 12 Chemical Quantities 12.2 Using Moles. Warm-up: Making a Sandwich How Many Sandwiches?

Dec 29, 2015

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Page 1: Chapter 12 Chemical Quantities 12.2 Using Moles. Warm-up: Making a Sandwich How Many Sandwiches?

Chapter 12 Chemical Quantities

12.2 Using Moles

Page 2: Chapter 12 Chemical Quantities 12.2 Using Moles. Warm-up: Making a Sandwich How Many Sandwiches?

Warm-up: Making a Sandwich

How Many Sandwiches?

Page 3: Chapter 12 Chemical Quantities 12.2 Using Moles. Warm-up: Making a Sandwich How Many Sandwiches?

What is Stoichiometry?

Stoichiometry is the study of quantitative relationships between amounts of reactants used and products formed by a chemical reaction.

A balanced chemical equation is needed to solve any stoichiometry problem

Page 4: Chapter 12 Chemical Quantities 12.2 Using Moles. Warm-up: Making a Sandwich How Many Sandwiches?

Practical Applications of StoichiometryIn a spacecraft, the carbon dioxide exhaled by astronauts can be removed by its reaction with lithium hydroxide, LiOH, according to the following chemical equation.

CO2(g) + 2LiOH(s) Li2CO3(s) + H2O(l)

How many moles of lithium hydroxide are required to react with 20 mol of CO2, the average amount exhaled by a person each day?

Page 5: Chapter 12 Chemical Quantities 12.2 Using Moles. Warm-up: Making a Sandwich How Many Sandwiches?

Strategy – Relate everything to the mole

The mole is the common thread that links reactants to products.

1CO2(g) + 2LiOH(s) 1Li2CO3(s) + 1H2O(l)

Mole Ratios

molLiOH

molCO

2

1 2

32

2

1

1

COmolLi

molCOOmolH

molCO

2

2

1

1

321

2

COmolLi

molLiOHOmolH

molLiOH

21

2

Page 7: Chapter 12 Chemical Quantities 12.2 Using Moles. Warm-up: Making a Sandwich How Many Sandwiches?

How many moles of oxygen are needed to fully combust 1.6 moles of ethane(C2H6)?

OHCOOHC 22262 ________

Practice Problems – Mole to Mole

How many moles of water are formed when 3.8 moles of Hydrogen react with an excess of Oxygen?

O

Balanced Chemical Equation

Page 9: Chapter 12 Chemical Quantities 12.2 Using Moles. Warm-up: Making a Sandwich How Many Sandwiches?

How many moles of oxygen are needed to produce 15.6g of carbon dioxide?

OHCOOHC 22262 6472

Practice Problems – Mole to Mass

How many grams of water are formed when 4.5 moles of oxygen react with an excess of hydrogen?

O

Page 10: Chapter 12 Chemical Quantities 12.2 Using Moles. Warm-up: Making a Sandwich How Many Sandwiches?

How many grams of ethane are needed to produce 23.4g of water?

OHCOOHC 22262 6472

Practice Problems – Mass to Mass

How many grams of water are formed when 18.6 grams of oxygen react with an excess of hydrogen?

O

Page 13: Chapter 12 Chemical Quantities 12.2 Using Moles. Warm-up: Making a Sandwich How Many Sandwiches?

Solving for Volume without STP Conditions When a chemical reaction is carried out under

conditions other than STP, the ideal gas law equation must be used.

PV=nRT is the Ideal Gas Law Equation where….

P = pressure V = volume n = moles R = gas constant = = T = temperature in Kelvin

Page 14: Chapter 12 Chemical Quantities 12.2 Using Moles. Warm-up: Making a Sandwich How Many Sandwiches?

Practice Problems – Ideal Gas LawPV=nRT R = gas constant = =

OHCOOHC 22262 6472

What volume of carbon dioxide can be produced from 1.2 moles of ethane gas at 200K and 0.65 atm?

Page 16: Chapter 12 Chemical Quantities 12.2 Using Moles. Warm-up: Making a Sandwich How Many Sandwiches?

Percent Yield

Stoichiometric calculations provide a theoretical yield or maximum amount of product that can be produced from a given amount of reactants.

The actual yield is the amount that is actually produced when a reaction is carried out. The percent yield reflects the ratio of the theoretical and actual yields 100

)(

)(x

tryStoichiomelYieldTheoretica

ExperimentdActualYielldPercentYie

Page 17: Chapter 12 Chemical Quantities 12.2 Using Moles. Warm-up: Making a Sandwich How Many Sandwiches?

Practice Problem - Percent Yield When 4.3 grams of sodium are combined with aluminum nitrate in the following equation, 1.52g of aluminum are produced. What is the percent yield of aluminum?3𝑁𝑎+𝐴𝑙 ¿

Page 19: Chapter 12 Chemical Quantities 12.2 Using Moles. Warm-up: Making a Sandwich How Many Sandwiches?

Percent Composition by Mass

The total mass of each individual element in a compound divided by the total mass of the compound

What is the percent composition of Mg(BrO4)2?

Remember how to calculate molar mass…..

1(mass Mg) + 2(mass of Br) + 8(mass of oxygen) = Mass of Mg(BrO4)2

Page 21: Chapter 12 Chemical Quantities 12.2 Using Moles. Warm-up: Making a Sandwich How Many Sandwiches?

Empirical Formula

Chemical formula which contains the lowest whole number ratio of atoms

Ionic formulas always contain the lowest whole number ratiosCovalent compounds do not always contain the lowest whole number ratios

What is the Empirical Formula of the following compounds?

C6H12O6 H2O2C3H9O6

Page 22: Chapter 12 Chemical Quantities 12.2 Using Moles. Warm-up: Making a Sandwich How Many Sandwiches?

Determining the Empirical Formula of a Compound

What is the empirical formula for a compound which contains 25.9% nitrogen and 74.1% oxygen by mass?

molNg

molegN 85.1

14

19.25

1. Covert % to mass (if needed)

2. Convert mass to moles

3. Divide each molar quantity by the lowest number of moles

4. Multiply by the smallest number needed to create a whole number ratio (if needed)

Assume a 100g sample. In that sample 25.9 g is nitrogen and 74.1g is oxygen

NxOy

molOg

molegO 63.4

16

11.74

N1.85O4.63

85.1

63.4

85.1

85.1 ON N1O2.5

N1x2O2.5x2N2O5

Page 23: Chapter 12 Chemical Quantities 12.2 Using Moles. Warm-up: Making a Sandwich How Many Sandwiches?

Which of the following are empirical formulas?

C2H8N2 H3PO4C2H8

CH4C8H12O4 Li2SO4

Warm-up

Page 25: Chapter 12 Chemical Quantities 12.2 Using Moles. Warm-up: Making a Sandwich How Many Sandwiches?

Simple Molecular Problems

What is the molecular formula of a compound

with an empirical formula of CH2O and a

molecular mass of 90g/mol?1. Determine the empirical mass

2. Divide the molecular mass by the empirical mass to determine how much larger the mass of the molecule is compared to the empirical formula

3. Multiple the subscripts of each element in the empirical formula by the factor determined in #2

CH2O =1(12g)+2(1g)+1(16g) = 30g

 

C1x3H2x3O1x3C3H6O3

Page 26: Chapter 12 Chemical Quantities 12.2 Using Moles. Warm-up: Making a Sandwich How Many Sandwiches?

Longer Molecular Problems

1. Determine the empirical formula2. Given the molecular mass, determine the

molecular formula

Determine the molecular formula of a compound that has a mass of 34g and contains 94.1% oxygen and 5.9% hydrogen by mass.