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Chemical Reactions and Equations Reactants Products Reactants are starting materials and are shown at left of arrow Products are final materials and are shown on right of arrow
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Chemical Reactions and Equations Reactants →Products Reactants are starting materials and are shown at left of arrow Products are final materials and are.

Jan 03, 2016

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Kathryn Day
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Page 1: Chemical Reactions and Equations Reactants →Products Reactants are starting materials and are shown at left of arrow Products are final materials and are.

Chemical Reactions and Equations

Reactants → Products

Reactants are starting materials and are shown at left of arrow

Products are final materials and are shown on right of arrow

Page 2: Chemical Reactions and Equations Reactants →Products Reactants are starting materials and are shown at left of arrow Products are final materials and are.

Phase Labels

Phase labels

• show state of materials

• written as subscript in parentheses after formula

(s) = solid

(l) = liquid

(g) = gas

(aq) = aqueous (dissolved in water)

Page 3: Chemical Reactions and Equations Reactants →Products Reactants are starting materials and are shown at left of arrow Products are final materials and are.

Greek Letter Delta Δ indicates that heat must be added to make reaction go

Δ shown over arrow

Page 4: Chemical Reactions and Equations Reactants →Products Reactants are starting materials and are shown at left of arrow Products are final materials and are.

Evidence for a Chemical Reaction

• Formation of a gas (Fizzes)

• Formation of a solid (precipitate) when liquids are mixed

• Change in color (not just dilution of color)

• Change in heat (released or absorbed)

Page 5: Chemical Reactions and Equations Reactants →Products Reactants are starting materials and are shown at left of arrow Products are final materials and are.

Equations must be BALANCED

• According to Law of Conservation of Matter (Mass), matter cannot be created or destroyed in a chemical reaction

• Thus equations must have same number of each kind of atom on left and right sides

Page 6: Chemical Reactions and Equations Reactants →Products Reactants are starting materials and are shown at left of arrow Products are final materials and are.

Rules for Balancing Equations

1. Write correct formula for each reactant and product.

2. Do NOT change formula----ever!

3. Change the number of each kind of atom in equation by writing coefficients in front of the formula.

Page 7: Chemical Reactions and Equations Reactants →Products Reactants are starting materials and are shown at left of arrow Products are final materials and are.

4. Keep changing coefficients until the equation is balanced and there are the same number of atoms of each kind on both sides.

5. Double check your equation.

Page 8: Chemical Reactions and Equations Reactants →Products Reactants are starting materials and are shown at left of arrow Products are final materials and are.

Balance the following equation

H2 + N2 NH3

Page 9: Chemical Reactions and Equations Reactants →Products Reactants are starting materials and are shown at left of arrow Products are final materials and are.

3 H2 + N2 2 NH3

Page 10: Chemical Reactions and Equations Reactants →Products Reactants are starting materials and are shown at left of arrow Products are final materials and are.

Avogadro’s Number and the Mole

Atomic mass unit (amu) - unit of measure for the mass of atoms.– carbon-12 assigned the mass of exactly 12

amu– 1 amu = 1.66 x 10-24 g – periodic table gives atomic weights in amu.

Page 11: Chemical Reactions and Equations Reactants →Products Reactants are starting materials and are shown at left of arrow Products are final materials and are.

What is atomic weight ofone F atom?

Atomic weight of one F atom (from periodic table) is 19.00 amu

What is mass of one F atom in grams?

atom F

F g10156.3

Famu 1

g101.661

atom F

Famu 19.00 23-24

Page 12: Chemical Reactions and Equations Reactants →Products Reactants are starting materials and are shown at left of arrow Products are final materials and are.

More convenient to work with grams than amu, but mass of one atom is VERY SMALL

Therefore, we use a new unit:

mole (mol)

Page 13: Chemical Reactions and Equations Reactants →Products Reactants are starting materials and are shown at left of arrow Products are final materials and are.

Mole

1 mole = 6.022 x 1023 (of anything)

Unit similar to other common units

dozen (12)

gross (12 dozen or 144)

Page 14: Chemical Reactions and Equations Reactants →Products Reactants are starting materials and are shown at left of arrow Products are final materials and are.

Avogadro’s number = 6.022 x 1023

Number of atoms of C found in 12.01 grams of Carbon

Page 15: Chemical Reactions and Equations Reactants →Products Reactants are starting materials and are shown at left of arrow Products are final materials and are.
Page 16: Chemical Reactions and Equations Reactants →Products Reactants are starting materials and are shown at left of arrow Products are final materials and are.

Molar Mass of element

Mass in grams of one mole of atoms

Can convert between atoms, moles and mass

Page 17: Chemical Reactions and Equations Reactants →Products Reactants are starting materials and are shown at left of arrow Products are final materials and are.

Mass ↔ Moles

Use molar mass 1 mol = “x” g

How many grams are there in 0.20 mol of H?

0.20 mol H x 1.008 g H = 0.20 g H 1 mol H

How many mol of C are there in 4.0 g of C?

Page 18: Chemical Reactions and Equations Reactants →Products Reactants are starting materials and are shown at left of arrow Products are final materials and are.

Molar Mass

Mass of one mole of compound

Molar mass has same numerical value as formula weight, but different units (g/mol)

1 formula weight of NaCl = 58.5 amu

1 mole of NaCl = 58.5 g

Page 19: Chemical Reactions and Equations Reactants →Products Reactants are starting materials and are shown at left of arrow Products are final materials and are.

Compounds

Formula mass (formula weight):

Mass of one molecule or formula unit

Given in amu

Add up atomic mass of all atoms in compound

Page 20: Chemical Reactions and Equations Reactants →Products Reactants are starting materials and are shown at left of arrow Products are final materials and are.

Calculation of Formula Weight

NaCl

1 Na @ 23.0 amu = 23.0 amu

1 Cl @ 35.45 amu = 35.45 “

1 formula weight of NaCl = 58.5 amu

Page 21: Chemical Reactions and Equations Reactants →Products Reactants are starting materials and are shown at left of arrow Products are final materials and are.

What do the coefficients in a balanced equation mean?

3 H2 + 1 N2 2 NH3

Moles 3 1 2Molecules 3 1 2

Coefficients do not give mass relationship

Page 22: Chemical Reactions and Equations Reactants →Products Reactants are starting materials and are shown at left of arrow Products are final materials and are.

Conversions between moles and atoms

• 1 mol = 6.02 x 1023

Page 23: Chemical Reactions and Equations Reactants →Products Reactants are starting materials and are shown at left of arrow Products are final materials and are.
Page 24: Chemical Reactions and Equations Reactants →Products Reactants are starting materials and are shown at left of arrow Products are final materials and are.

Need to convert moles to mass in order to get mass relationships (not coefficients)

3 H2 + 1 N2 2 NH3

3 mol H2 + 1 mol N2 → 2 mol NH3

3 mol H2 x 1 mol N2 x 2 mol NH3 x

2 g H2/mol H2 28 g N2/mol N2 17 g NH3/mol NH3

6 g H2 + 28 g N2 = 34 g NH3

Page 25: Chemical Reactions and Equations Reactants →Products Reactants are starting materials and are shown at left of arrow Products are final materials and are.

2 Mg + O2 2 MgO

• How much MgO can be made if you start with 6.07 g of Mg?

• Convert g Mg to mol Mg• Convert mol Mg to mol MgO (Use equation)• Convert mol MgO to g Mg

1 mol Mg = 24.3 g1 mol MgO = 40.3 g

1 mol O2 = 32 g

Page 26: Chemical Reactions and Equations Reactants →Products Reactants are starting materials and are shown at left of arrow Products are final materials and are.

2 Mg + O2 2 MgO

• How much MgO can be made if you start with 6.08 g of Mg?

Page 27: Chemical Reactions and Equations Reactants →Products Reactants are starting materials and are shown at left of arrow Products are final materials and are.

2 Mg + O2 2 MgO

• How much MgO can be made if you start with 6.08 g of Mg?

Page 28: Chemical Reactions and Equations Reactants →Products Reactants are starting materials and are shown at left of arrow Products are final materials and are.

Limiting Reagent

• May run out of one compound before you use up all of the other compound.

If you start with 6.08 g Mg and 32 g O2 which will be used up first?

Page 29: Chemical Reactions and Equations Reactants →Products Reactants are starting materials and are shown at left of arrow Products are final materials and are.

Limiting Reagent

• May run out of one compound before you use up all of the other compound.

If you start with 6.08 g Mg and 32 g O2 which will be used up first?