Chapter Four
Chapter Four
Chapter Four
Stoichiometry
Stoichiometry (Greek stoicheion, “element,” and metron,
“measure”) provides an essential set of tools widely used in
chemistry.
Stoichiometry is the area of study that examines the
quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical
reactions.
Stoichiometry is built on an understanding of atomic
masses, chemical formulas, and the law of conservation of
mass.
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The Main Concept
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The numbers in front of the formulas, called
coefficients, indicate the relative numbers of molecules
of each kind involved in the reaction.
2H2 (g)+ O2(g) 2H20 (l)
Why?
Because atoms are neither created nor destroyed in any
reaction, a chemical equation must have an equal
number of atoms of each element on each side of the
arrow.
We use the symbols (g), (l), (s), and (aq) for gas, liquid,
solid, and aqueous (water) solution, respectively.
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Balancing Equations
Once we know the formulas of the reactants and products in a reaction,
we can write an unbalanced equation. We then balance the equation by
determining the coefficients that provide equal numbers of each type of
atom on the two sides of the equation.
For most purposes, a balanced equation should contain the smallest
possible whole- number coefficients.
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Process of Balancing Chemical Equations
1. .Never change subscripts on chemicals
2. Start with the substance that contains atoms which appears least.
CH4+ 2O2 CO2 + 2H2O
Starting with CH4 should be an excellent choice.
3.Always start with the more complicated compound (regardless where it
appears), starting with one atom in a time.
Na2CO3 + 2HCl 2NaCl + H2O + CO2
You should start with Na2CO3 , starting with adjusting the number of
Na, C, and finally O.
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Balance the following chemicalequation:
Na + H2O NaOH + H2
1. First, look at the more complicated compound which is definitely
NaOH.
2. Start by the first atom (Na) where you have one on both sides
3. With regards to O, you also have one on each side
4. With regards to H, you have 3 in the products side but two on the
reactants side. Therefore multiply H2 on right side by ½. You get:
Na + H2O NaOH + ½ H2
5. Do not leave fractions, therefore multiply both sides by 2:
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Formula and Molecular Weights
The formula weight of a substance is the sum of the atomic weights of
the elements in the chemical formula of the substance.
Using atomic weights, we find, for example, that the formula weight of
sulfuric acid (H2SO4) is 98.1 amu:
FW of H2SO4 = 2(AW of H) + (AW of S) + 4(AW of O)
= 2(1.0 amu) + 32.1 amu + 4(16.0 amu)
= 98.1 amu
The formula unit of NaCl, for instance, consists of one Na+ ion
and one Cl- ion. Thus, the formula weight of NaCl is defined
as the mass of one formula unit:
FW of NaCl = 23 amu + 35.5 amu = 58.5 amu
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Percentage Composition from Chemical Formulas
chemists must sometimes calculate the percentage composition of a
compound—that is, the percentage by mass contributed by each element in
the substance.
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The mole
Even the smallest samples we deal with in the laboratory contain
enormous numbers of atoms, ions, or molecules. For example, a
teaspoon of water (about 5 mL) contains about water molecules.
Mole: is group that consist an Avogadro numbers of things
use small things
Amole= (Avogadro's Number )
Amole is kind of like a dozen there are 12 things in dozen and
things in mole
A dozen= 12 things , amole=
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Amole= (Avogadro's Number )
a dozen of books = 12 book
A dozen of pens= 12 pen
A mole of books= books
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A mole of pens = pens
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Calculate the number of H atoms in 0.350 mol of C6H12O6. ?
mol H atoms = mol C6H12O6
mol of H atoms
Number of atoms = Number of moles of atomsAvogadro’s number
Number of H atoms
How many oxygen atoms are in 0.25 mol Ca(NO3)2?
mol of O atoms in mol Ca(NO3)2
mol of O atoms in Ca(NO3)2
Number of O atoms =
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How many oxygen atoms are in 1.50 mol of sodium
carbonate (Na2CO3)?
mol of O atoms in Na2CO3 = mol Na2CO3
mol of O atoms in Na2CO3
Number of mol of O atoms in 1.50 mol Na 2CO3 = O atom
Practice
How many carbon atoms are in 1.50 mol of sodium carbonate
Na2CO3?
How many sodium atoms are in 1.50 mol of sodium carbonate
Na2CO3?
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Molar Mass from the Periodic Table
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The atomic weight of an element in atomic mass units is
numerically equal to the mass in grams of 1 mol of that
element. For example, C has an atomic weight of 12.01amu,
therefore, 1 mol C has a mass of 12.01 g.
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Mole Relationships
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Molar mass
Au has an atomic weight of 197 amu, therefore, 1 mol Au has a mass
of 197 g
For other kinds of substances, the same numerical relationship
exists between formula weight and mass of one mole of a substance:
H2O has a formula weight of 18.0 amu, therefore, 1 mol H2O has a
mass of 18.0 g.
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Information Contained in the Chemical Formula of Glucose
C6H12O6 ( M = 180.16 g/mol)
Carbon (C) Hydrogen (H) Oxygen (O)
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Example
a. Which has more mass, a mole of water (H2O) or a mole of glucose
(C6H12O6)?
b. Which contains more molecules, a mole of water or a mole of
glucose?
a: One mol of H2O has a molar mass of 18.0g, while 1 mol of C6H12O6
has a molar mass of 180.0g. Therefore a mol of C6H12O6 has greater mass
than a mol of water
b. One mol of water has the same number of molecules as 1 mol of
C6H12O6
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Inter-converting Masses and Moles
Conversion of masses to moles and vice versa is very important. The
process is easy and straight-forward:
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Example :
Calculate the number of moles of glucose (C6H12O6) in 5.380 g of
C6H12O6.
The molar mass of a substance provides the factor for converting
grams to moles. The molar mass of C6H12O6 is 180.0 g/mol
mol NaHCO3 =
number of molecules
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MASS FROM MOLES
Calculate the mass, in grams, of 0.433 mol of calcium nitrate
Ca(NO3)2.?
FW Ca(NO3)2 = 164.1 g/mol
Mass substance= mol substance FW
Mass Ca(NO3)2 =
What is the mass, in grams, of (a) 6.33 mol of NaHCO3 (FW = 84.0
g/mol) and (b) mol of sulfuric acid (FW=98.1 g/mol)?
(a) g NaHCO3 =
(b) g Sulfuric acid
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Inter-converting Masses to Number of Particles
How many copper atoms are there in 3g of copper (AW = 63.5 g/mol)?
mol Copper = (mass/FW) = (3/63.5) = 0.047
Number of copper atoms =
Number of copper atoms =
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Example
a) How many glucose molecules are in 5.23 g of C6H12O6 (FW = 180 g/mol)?
(b) How many oxygen atoms (FW = 16 g/mol) are in this sample.
(a) mol C6H12O6 = {5.23g/180.0 (g/mol)} = 0.0291
umber of C6H12O6 moleculesmolecule
(b) Number of moles of O atoms = 6 moles of C6H12O6
Number of moles of O atoms
number of atoms=
Number of O atoms
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Example
a) How many nitric acid molecules are in 4.20 g of HNO3 (FW = 63.0
g/mol)? (b) How many O atoms are in this sample?
(b) There are 3 moles of O atoms per mol of HNO3 molecules, or:
mol O atoms = 3 mol HNO3
Number of O atoms = mol O atoms * NA
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Empirical Formulas From Analysis
Empirical formula: the simplest most reduce ratio of atoms in compound
The empirical formula for glucose (C6H12O6) is CH2O
The empirical formula can, sometimes be the actual formula like H2O
or ionic compound like NaCl
Obtaining the Empirical Formula
Step one : assume % as grams
Step two : change gram to mol
Step three: divided by smallest number of moles
Step four : Do not leave fractions by multiply to get a whole number
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Mercury and chlorine combine to form a compound that is 73.9%
mercury (AW = 200.6 g) and 26.1% chlorine (FW = 35.5 g) by mass.
Find the empirical formula of the compound?
Hg 73.9%= 73.9 g Cl 26.1% = 26.1g
mol Hg = {73.9 g/(200.6 g)} = 0.368 mol
Cl = {26.1 g/(35.3 g)} = 0.735
Hg0.368 Cl0.735
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Now dividing by the smallest number
gives the empirical formula: CH3O
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Example
Consider the combustion of butane (C4H10), the fuel in disposable general-
purpose lighters, calculate the mass of CO2 produced when 1.00 g of C4H10
is burned.
g H2O
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Example
Determine how many grams of water are produced in the
oxidation of 1.00 g of glucose, C6H12O6:
+ plus 16 tires
excess
CB + 4T CT4 56
Grilled Cheese
Sandwich
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Example
Assume you have 10 mol of H2 and 7 mol of O2 , find the limiting
reactant in the reaction:
is used to produce electricity in a hydrogen fuel cell. Suppose a fuel cell contains
150 g of H2(g) and 1500 g of O2(g). How many grams of water can form?
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Example
The reaction:
2H2(g) + O2(g) g 2 H2O(g)
is used to produce electricity in a hydrogen fuel cell. Suppose a fuel
cell contains 150 g of H2(g) and 1500 g of O2(g). How many grams
of unreacted O2 will be left?
Since H2 is the limiting reactant (from previous slide):
mol O2 reacted = ½ mol H2
mol O2 reacted
Gram of O2 reacted
gram of O2 unreacted = 1500 – 1200 = 300g 66
Theoretical Yields
The quantity of product calculated (theoretically) to form when all of a
limiting reactant is consumed is called the theoretical yield. The amount of
product experimentally obtained, called the actual yield, is always less than
(and can never be greater than) the theoretical yield.
There are many reasons for this difference. Part of the reactants may not
react, for example, or they may react in a way different from that desired
(side reactions). In addition, it is not always possible to recover all of the
product from the reaction mixture. The percent yield of a reaction relates
actual and theoretical yields:
actual yield
Percent yield = 100
theoretical yield
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Calculating Percent Yield
To calculate the percent yield, the actual yield
and theoretical yield are needed.
You prepared cookie dough to make 5 dozen
cookies. The phone rings and you answer. While
talking, a sheet of 12 cookies burn and you have
to throw them out. The rest of the cookies are
okay. What is the percent yield of edible cookies?
Theoretical yield 60 cookies possible
Actual yield 48 cookies to eat
Percent yield 48 cookies x 100 = 80% yield
60 cookies
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Example
: For the balanced equation shown below , if the reaction of 35.5
g of ZnS( mw = 97.4 ) produces 17.3 g of SO2 ( mw = 64.1 ) ,
what is the percent yield ?
2ZnS+ 3O2 2ZnO + 2 SO2
Solution :
Mole ZnS= ( 35.5 / 97.4 (=0.3645
Mole of SO2=0.3645
Mas of SO2=0.3645X 64.1= 23.4g
Theoretical yield =23.4g
Actual yield = 17.3 g
% yield = (17.3 / 23.4 ) X 100 = 73.9 %
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Example
2C(g) + O2(g) 2CO(g)
What is the percent yield of CO when 30.0 g O2 are used? The actual
yield is 40.0 g CO.
MoleO2
Mole COO2
mass
percent yield
40.0 g CO (actual) x 100 = 76.2 % yield
52.5 g CO (theoretical)
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End
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