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STOICHIOMETRY. Stoichiometry is the science of using balanced chemical equations to determine exact amounts of chemicals needed or produced in a chemical.

Dec 21, 2015

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Emil Newman
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Page 1: STOICHIOMETRY.  Stoichiometry is the science of using balanced chemical equations to determine exact amounts of chemicals needed or produced in a chemical.

STOICHIOMETRY

Page 2: STOICHIOMETRY.  Stoichiometry is the science of using balanced chemical equations to determine exact amounts of chemicals needed or produced in a chemical.

Stoichiometry is the science of using balanced chemical equations to determine exact amounts of chemicals needed or produced in a chemical reaction.

Page 3: STOICHIOMETRY.  Stoichiometry is the science of using balanced chemical equations to determine exact amounts of chemicals needed or produced in a chemical.

Determining Ratios in Balanced Chemical Reactions

What is the balanced chemical reaction for the reaction between nitrogen gas (N2) and hydrogen gas (H2) to produce ammonia (NH3)?

This means that for every one mole of N2 you have (28.02 g) you need to have 3 mole of H2 (3 × 2.02 g = 6.06 g)…

(34.08 g of reactants)

You make 2 mole of NH3 ( 14.01 + 3.03 = 17.04 * 2 = 34.08 g)

Page 4: STOICHIOMETRY.  Stoichiometry is the science of using balanced chemical equations to determine exact amounts of chemicals needed or produced in a chemical.

Mole Ratios

These are what we call mole ratios

Example 1: If you had 5 mol of N2, how many mol of H2 would you need? How many mol of NH3 would you make?

Page 5: STOICHIOMETRY.  Stoichiometry is the science of using balanced chemical equations to determine exact amounts of chemicals needed or produced in a chemical.

Example Problem 2: Calculations Involving Mass of Reactants

Propane, C3H8(g), is a gas that is commonly used in barbeques. Calculate the mass of oxygen gas, O2, that is needed to burn 15 g of propane. (Produces CO2 and H2O)

Page 6: STOICHIOMETRY.  Stoichiometry is the science of using balanced chemical equations to determine exact amounts of chemicals needed or produced in a chemical.

Example Problem 2: Calculations involving Numbers of Entities and Mass

How many molecules of oxygen are produced from the decomposition of 12 g of water into its elements?

Recall: O2 and H2 are produced

Page 7: STOICHIOMETRY.  Stoichiometry is the science of using balanced chemical equations to determine exact amounts of chemicals needed or produced in a chemical.

Practice Problems:

1. Bauxite ore contains aluminum oxide, Al2O3, which is decomposed using electricity to produce aluminum metal and oxygen gas (O2). What masse of aluminum metal can be produced from 125 g of aluminum oxide? How many grams of O2 are produced?

2. Potassium metal, K(s), reacts with hydrochloric acid, HCl(aq), to produce aqueous potassium chloride and hydrogen gas, H2. How many grams of potassium are required to produce 5.00 g of hydrogen gas?

3. Potassium chlorate, KClO3, decomposes when heated to form solid potassium chloride and oxygen gas. How many grams of KClO3 must decompose to produce 0.96 g of O2?

Page 8: STOICHIOMETRY.  Stoichiometry is the science of using balanced chemical equations to determine exact amounts of chemicals needed or produced in a chemical.
Page 9: STOICHIOMETRY.  Stoichiometry is the science of using balanced chemical equations to determine exact amounts of chemicals needed or produced in a chemical.

Limiting Reactant, Excess Reactant and Percent Yield

In the real world, you never have perfect amounts of every reactant you need…

Page 10: STOICHIOMETRY.  Stoichiometry is the science of using balanced chemical equations to determine exact amounts of chemicals needed or produced in a chemical.

Example

In the synthesis of water, we require exactly 2 mol of H2 and exactly 1 mol O2 to create exactly 2 mol of H2O…

What would happen if we have a 2 mol H2 and 8 mol of O2?

Would this change the amount f H2O that would be created?

Page 11: STOICHIOMETRY.  Stoichiometry is the science of using balanced chemical equations to determine exact amounts of chemicals needed or produced in a chemical.

No…

There would be 7mol of O2 left over.

O2 is an excess reagent; H2 is limiting

Page 12: STOICHIOMETRY.  Stoichiometry is the science of using balanced chemical equations to determine exact amounts of chemicals needed or produced in a chemical.

Balanced Equation

2 H2 O2 2H2O

Moles 2 1 2

Molar Mass 2.02 g/mol 32.00 g/mol 18.02 g/mol

Mass 4.04 g 32.00 g 36.04 g

Page 13: STOICHIOMETRY.  Stoichiometry is the science of using balanced chemical equations to determine exact amounts of chemicals needed or produced in a chemical.

Balanced Equation

2 H2 O2 2H2O

Moles 2 8 2

Molar Mass 2.02 g/mol 32.00 g/mol 18.02 g/mol

Mass (Needed) 4.04 g 32.00 g

Mass (Used Up/Made)

4.04 g 32.00 g 36.04

Left Over 0.00 g 224.00 g

Page 14: STOICHIOMETRY.  Stoichiometry is the science of using balanced chemical equations to determine exact amounts of chemicals needed or produced in a chemical.

A chemical reaction will stop once any one of the reactants runs out.

This reactant is known as the limiting reagent (limiting reactant)

Any other reactant is an excess reagent

Page 15: STOICHIOMETRY.  Stoichiometry is the science of using balanced chemical equations to determine exact amounts of chemicals needed or produced in a chemical.

Example 1:

Table Salt, BaCL, can be formed by the reaction of sodium metal and chlorine gas. A reaction mixture contains 45.9 g of sodium and 142.0 g of chlorine. Calculate the mass of sodium chloride that is produced.

Page 16: STOICHIOMETRY.  Stoichiometry is the science of using balanced chemical equations to determine exact amounts of chemicals needed or produced in a chemical.

Example 2:

Determine the mass of carbon monoxide that is produced when 32.1 g of methane, CH4 undergoes incomplete combustion with 160.0 g of oxygen (products: CO and H2O)

Page 17: STOICHIOMETRY.  Stoichiometry is the science of using balanced chemical equations to determine exact amounts of chemicals needed or produced in a chemical.

Example 3:

Phosphorus, P4, reacts with chlorine gas to produce solid phosphorus pentachloride as the only product. Determine the mas of phosphorus pentachloride that is produced from a reaction between 123.88 g of phosphorus and 950.00 g of chlorine.

Page 18: STOICHIOMETRY.  Stoichiometry is the science of using balanced chemical equations to determine exact amounts of chemicals needed or produced in a chemical.

Percentage Yield

Yield: the quantity of product produced in a chemical reaction

Actual Yield: the quantity of product that is actually produced in a chemical reaction

Theoretical Yield: the quantity of product calculated from a balanced chemical equation (using stoichiometry)

Page 19: STOICHIOMETRY.  Stoichiometry is the science of using balanced chemical equations to determine exact amounts of chemicals needed or produced in a chemical.

There are many reasons why the amount of a product predicted for a reaction may not actually form

Reactions may not go to completion

Some of the reactant may be impure

There may be competing side reactions

It may be difficult to collect the product

Page 20: STOICHIOMETRY.  Stoichiometry is the science of using balanced chemical equations to determine exact amounts of chemicals needed or produced in a chemical.
Page 21: STOICHIOMETRY.  Stoichiometry is the science of using balanced chemical equations to determine exact amounts of chemicals needed or produced in a chemical.

Example 1:

Iron is produced from its ore, hematite, Fe2O3, by heating hematite with carbon monoxide in a blast furnace. If 635 g of iron is obtained from 1150 g of hematite, what is the percentage yield of iron?

Page 22: STOICHIOMETRY.  Stoichiometry is the science of using balanced chemical equations to determine exact amounts of chemicals needed or produced in a chemical.

Practice 1:

The most common ore of arsenic, FeSAs, can be heated to produce arsenic and iron(II) sulfide. When 250 g of the ore was processed industrially, 95.3 kg of arsenic was obtained. Calculate the yield of arsenic.

Page 23: STOICHIOMETRY.  Stoichiometry is the science of using balanced chemical equations to determine exact amounts of chemicals needed or produced in a chemical.

Homework…

You have a test on Monday, November 24 at 6:30 pm, sharp.

I strongly recommend you study for it.