Notes Chapter 3-Stoichiometry
Notes Chapter 3-Stoichiometry
Notes Chapter 3-Stoichiometry
3.1 Formulae
State the formulae of the elements and compounds named in the subject
content
Define the molecular formula of a compound as the number and type of
different atoms in one molecule
Deduce the formula of a simple compound from the relative numbers of atoms
present in a model or a diagrammatic representation
Construct word equations and symbol equations to show how reactants form
products, including state symbols
Define the empirical formula of a compound as the simplest whole number
ratio of the different atoms or ions in a compound
Deduce the formula of an ionic compound from the relative numbers of the
ions present in a model or a diagrammatic representation or from the charges
on the ions
Construct symbol equations with state symbols, including ionic equations
Deduce the symbol equation with state symbols for a chemical reaction, given
relevant information
Describe relative atomic mass, Ar, as the average mass of the isotopes of an
element compared to 1/12th of the mass of an atom of 12C
Define relative molecular mass, Mr, as the sum of the relative atomic masses.
Relative formula mass, Mr, will be used for ionic compounds
Calculate reacting masses in simple proportions. Calculations will not involve
the mole concept
47
NES/Chemistry/IGCSE/2023
to calculate:
o amount of substance
o mass
o molar mass
o relative atomic mass or relative molecular / formula mass
o number of particles, using the value of the Avogadro constant
Use the molar gas volume, taken as 24dm3 at room temperature and
pressure, r.t.p., in calculations involving gases
Calculate stoichiometric reacting masses, limiting reactants, volumes of gases
at r.t.p., volumes of solutions and concentrations of solutions expressed in
g/dm3 and mol/dm3, including conversion between cm3 and dm3
Use experimental data from a titration to calculate the moles of solute, or the
concentration or volume of a solution
Calculate empirical formulae and molecular formulae, given appropriate data
Calculate percentage yield, percentage composition by mass and percentage
purity, given appropriate data
48
NES/Chemistry/IGCSE/2023
Molecular formula of a compound is the number and type of different atoms in one
molecule
Empirical formula of a compound is the simplest whole number ratio of the different
atoms or ions in a compound
A mole is the unit of amount of substance and 1 mole contains 6.02 x 1023 atoms,
ions or molecules
49
NES/Chemistry/IGCSE/2023
3.1 Formulae
Naming Compounds
Compounds take their names from the elements they are made up from. The rules
for naming compounds are:
The metal, or positive ion, goes first and the non-metal goes second.
If a compound does not have a metal, then the non-metal that is most to the
left on the Periodic Table goes first.
The (second) non-metal's name changes its ending.
So a compound containing calcium and oxygen would be called calcium oxide and a
compound containing lithium and hydrogen would be called lithium hydride and a
compound containing phosphorus and chlorine would be called phosphorus chloride.
Note - organic molecules (see Chapter 11) are named using a different system.
50
NES/Chemistry/IGCSE/2023
Formulae of Compounds
To work out the formula of a compound you must know the valency of the elements
in the compound. Most elements' valency can be found from the Periodic Table.
The exceptions to this are transition metals, other elements with variable valencies
and polyatomic ions.
Cations Anions
51
NES/Chemistry/IGCSE/2023
Formula of
Element
Diatomic Molecule
Hydrogen H2
Nitrogen N2
Oxygen O2
Fluorine F2
Chlorine Cl2
Bromine Br2
Iodine I2
Astatine At2
Compounds have a formula that tells you the number and type of atoms in the
molecule. The formula is always in a fixed ratio.
For example, water is H2O which means that water contains hydrogen and oxygen
bonded together. It also means that the H:O ratio is always 2:1.
Step 1 Symbol Na Cl
Step 2 Valency 1 1
52
NES/Chemistry/IGCSE/2023
Step 1 Mg Br
Step 2 2 1
Step 3 Mg1Br2
Step 4 MgBr2
Step 1 K O
Step 2 1 2
Step 3 K2 O 1
Step 4 K2 O
Step 1 Ca S
Step 2 2 2
Step 3 Ca2S2
Step 4 CaS
Step 1 Ge O
Step 2 4 2
Step 3 Ge2O4
Step 4 GeO2
53
NES/Chemistry/IGCSE/2023
Polyatomic Ions
Polyatomic ions made of more than one element, for example SO42 , or CO32 .
These ions need (brackets) if they have a number.
Step 1 Ca OH
Step 2 2 1
Step 3 Ca1(OH)2
Step 4 Ca(OH)2
Step 1 Mg CO3
Step 2 2 2
Step 3 Mg2(CO3)2
Step 4 MgCO3
54
NES/Chemistry/IGCSE/2023
Working Out the Number of Elements Present in Compounds from the Formula
If we have the formula of a compound we can work out the number of different
elements present in the compound by counting the number of different symbols in
the formula.
H2SO4
subscript after each
If no subscript is element tells us the
present then it is number of atoms of that
taken to be one type
So sulphuric acid, H2SO4 has 2 hydrogen atoms, 1 sulphur atom and 4 oxygen
atoms all bonded together in one molecule.
Example 8:
55
NES/Chemistry/IGCSE/2023
Types of Formula
Example 9:
H H
O
H C C C
lactic acid C3H6O3 CH2O
O H
H O H
H2C CH3
CH
H2C CH2
limonene C10H16 C5H8
HC CH2
C
CH3
56
NES/Chemistry/IGCSE/2023
Symbol Equations
A chemical equation is balanced when there are equal number of atoms and charges
on both sides of the equation.
1 magnesium 1 magnesium
2 hydrogen 2 hydrogen
2 chlorine 2 chlorine
57
NES/Chemistry/IGCSE/2023
Example 11: methane burning in oxygen to make carbon dioxide and water.
1 carbon 1 carbon
4 hydrogen 4 hydrogen
4 oxygen 4 oxygen
Example 12: ethane burning in oxygen to make carbon dioxide and water.
58
NES/Chemistry/IGCSE/2023
State Symbols
When writing equations, it is sometimes required to write state symbols after each
compound, or element:
(s) solid
(l) liquid
(g) gas
(aq) aqueous, which means dissolved in water
Ionic Equations
These are equations where the soluble ionic compounds are written with their ions
separated.
Example 13: Write an ionic equation for the displacement / redox / exothermic
reaction between aluminium powder and copper(II) sulphate
solution
59
NES/Chemistry/IGCSE/2023
Al + Cu2+ Al3+ + Cu
Step 1 Split the equation into two ionic half-equations - one for
oxidation and one for reduction.
Al Al3+ + 3e
Cu2+ + 2e Cu
2Al 2Al3+ + 6e
3Cu2+ + 6e 3Cu
2Al 2Al3+ + 6e
3Cu2+ + 6e 3Cu
You will notice that the total charges are equal on each side of the equation.
60
NES/Chemistry/IGCSE/2023
To do this multiply each Ar by the number of that type of atom present and then add
all the masses together.
Number of Each
Molecule Formula Atoms Present Ar Total Mass
Type of Atom
H 2 1 2
water H2 O
O 1 16 16
Total 18
Mr of water is 18
61
NES/Chemistry/IGCSE/2023
Number of each
Molecule Formula Atoms present Ar Total Mass
type of atom
Ca 1 40 40
calcium
CaCO3 C 1 12 12
carbonate
O 3 16 48
Total 100
Number of each
Molecule Formula Atoms present Ar Total Mass
type of atom
Ca 1 40 40
calcium
Ca(OH)2 O 2 16 32
hydroxide
H 2 1 2
Total 74
Mr of calcium hydroxide is 74
62
NES/Chemistry/IGCSE/2023
Moles
It was discovered that if you have 6.02 x 1023 particles of any chemical, then the
mass in grams will be the same as the chemicals mass number (Ar or Mr)
Ar is the same as the element's mass number and can be found on the Periodic
Table. It has the units g/mol, which just means how many grams there are in 1 mole.
We can use the Ar to work out the mass of one mole of an element. The Ar of sodium
is 23g/mol. So if we wanted to weigh out 1 mole of sodium atoms then we simply
weigh out 23g. This will contain 6.02 x 1023 atoms (Avogadro's constant).
The relative atomic mass (Ar), in grams, of any element contains 1 mole of
atoms.
mass used
Number of moles = mass
relative atomic mass used
mole Ar
63
NES/Chemistry/IGCSE/2023
46
Number of moles = = 2 moles of sodium atoms
23
The relative molecular mass (Mr) in grams, of any compound contains 1 mole
of molecules
mass
mass used
Number of moles = used
relative molecular mass
mole Mr
1.8
Number of moles = = 0.1 moles of water molecules
18
64
NES/Chemistry/IGCSE/2023
This combines using the number of moles formula above, with an equation.
20
Step 2 Number of moles NaOH = = 0.5 moles
40
Example 23: Iron(III) oxide is reduced to iron using carbon monoxide in the
blast furnace. How much iron will be produced from 100g of
iron(III) oxide?
100
Step 2 Number of moles Fe2O3 = = 0.625 moles
160
65
NES/Chemistry/IGCSE/2023
Example 24: Insoluble salts are made by precipitation. An equation for the
preparation of barium sulfate is:
66
NES/Chemistry/IGCSE/2023
1.165
Step 2 Number of moles BaSO4 =
233
3
= 5 x10 moles
mass used
Mr FeSO4.xH2O =
mole
1.390
Mr FeSO4.xH2O = = 278 g/mol
0.005
67
NES/Chemistry/IGCSE/2023
Limiting Reagent
This is used when we have different numbers of moles of reagents. The limiting
reagent will all react (there will be none left after the reaction has finished). The
other reagent will be in excess (there will be some left over after the reaction has
finished).
To calculate the limiting reagent you must calculate the number of moles of each
reagent and use the mole ratio to compare values.
Example 25: 10g of calcium carbonate reacts with 29.4g of sulphuric acid.
Which reagent is in excess?
10
Step 2 Number of moles CaCO3 = = 0.1 moles
100
29.4
Step 3 Number of moles H2SO4 = = 0.3 moles
98
The limiting reagent is used to calculate the number of moles of the other reagents
as it is all used up in the reaction.
68
NES/Chemistry/IGCSE/2023
To calculate the empirical formula of a compound you must use the following steps:
Step 4 Divide by the smallest number to turn the atom ratio into a whole
number for the formula
And then to calculate the molecular formula you will also need:
69
NES/Chemistry/IGCSE/2023
40 6 .7 53.3
Step 3
12 1 16
3 .3 6 .7 3 .3
Step 4
3 .3 3.3 3 .3
1 2 1
180
Step 5 number of empirical units =
30
70
NES/Chemistry/IGCSE/2023
Example 28: An oxide of vanadium has a mass of 1.274g, which formed from
0.714g of vanadium reacting with oxygen. Calculate the empirical
formula and the ionic formula.
0.714 0.56
Step 3
51 16
0.014 0.035
0.014 0.035
Step 4
0.014 0.014
1 2.5
71
NES/Chemistry/IGCSE/2023
mole 24
If the question gives the volume of gas in cm3:
Example 29: Find the number of moles there are of ammonia gas at r.t.p. in a
200cm3 gas jar.
200
number of moles =
24000
72
NES/Chemistry/IGCSE/2023
2 2 2O
½ O2 3 CO2 + .....H2O
73
NES/Chemistry/IGCSE/2023
mass concentration
Mr =
molar concentration
mole
volume conc
(dm3)
To calculate the concentration of a solution in a reaction you must use the following
steps:
74
NES/Chemistry/IGCSE/2023
Step 2 1 1 1 1
volume
Step 3 Moles NaOH = x concentration
1000
30.0
Moles NaOH = x 0.25
1000
3
= 7.5 x 10 moles
3
Step 4 Moles HCl = 7.5 x 10 moles
3
mole 7.5 x 10
Step 5 Concentration HCl = =
volume 0.025
75
NES/Chemistry/IGCSE/2023
Percentage Yield
The percentage yield of a product is the percentage of its theoretical yield achieved
in practice.
The theoretical yield of a product is the maximum calculated mass that can be
obtained from a given mass of specified reactant.
mass produced
Percentage yield = x 100%
theoretical yield
Step 3 1 1 1 1
0.05 mol 0.05 mol 0.05 mol 0.05 mol
7.3
Step 5 Percentage yield = x 100 = 58.4%
12.5
76
NES/Chemistry/IGCSE/2023
Percentage Purity
The percentage purity of a reactant is the actual mass reacted divided by the initial
mass used expressed as a percentage.
Percentage purity is used when a reagent is impure. It contains impurities that do not
react.
0.120 3
Step 2 moles of CO2 = = 5 x 10 moles
24
Step 3 2 1 1 1 1
2 3 3 3 3
1x10 5x10 5x10 5x10 5x10
3
Step 4 actual mass BaCO3 = 5 x 10 x 197 = 0.985 g
0.985
Step 5 Percentage purity = x 100
1.570
= 62.7% pure
77