Lecture 2 Stoichiometry
Lecture 2 Stoichiometry
Lecture 2 Stoichiometry
Stoichiometry
Using the information in chemical equations
Learning Catalytics
Number of atoms in 12 g of
12
1 mole = 6.0221023
1 mol
m
168 g
9.32 mol
168 g
n
-1
18.02 g
M 18.02 g mol
Moles Particles: use Avogadros number
e.g. How many molecules in 168 g of water?
1 mol
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23
-1
168 g
6.022 10 mol 5.61 10
18.02 g
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Another example
How many moles of nitrate present when 5.00
g of aluminum nitrate dissolved in water?
Aluminum Nitrate = Al(NO3)3 (or AlN3O9)
Molar Mass = MAl + 3MN + 9MO
= (26.982) + 3(14.0067) + 9(15.9994)
= 212.997 g/mol
Moles of Al(NO3)3 = (5.00 g)/(212.997 g/mol)
= 0.02347 mol
Moles NO3- = 3 Moles Al(NO3)3 = 0.0704 mol
Example
A compound contains 75.9% carbon, 17.7%
nitrogen, and 6.4% hydrogen by mass.
What is the empirical formula?
Step 1: Assume 100 g of sample.
100 g contains
75.9 g of C
17.7 g of N
6.4 g of H.
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Example
Step 2: Convert the masses of atoms in the
sample to moles, using the molar masses
of the atoms
1 mol C
75.9 g C
6.32 mol C
12.011 g C
1 mol N
17.7 g N
1.26 mol N
14.0067 g N
1 mol H
6.4 g H
6.3 mol H
1.0079 g H
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Example
Step 3: Calculate the mole ratio
Divide moles from step 2 by the smallest
value
6.32 6.3 1.26
C:H :N
:
:
5.01: 5.0 :1
1.26 1.26 1.26
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Example
Note:
5.01 is not exactly 5
Remember:
It is a measurement
Measurements always have errors
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C2.5H3N1
C64H6N30
C5.3H6.3N2.1
C5H6N2
C10H12N4
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Solution: Empirical
Formula
A compound contains C (63.8%), H (6.4%) and
N (29.8%). What is the empirical formula?
In 100 g of sample there are:
63.8 g C(1 mol/12.011 g) = 5.31 moles C
6.4 g H(1 mol/1.0079 g) = 6.3 moles H
29.8 g N(1 mol/14.007 g) = 2.13 moles N
The mole ratio is therefore:
C : H : N = 2.49 : 3.0 : 1
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Solution: Empirical
Formula
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Strategy:
Mass %
Analysis
Data
Report result
(empirical
formula)
Divide by lowest
number of moles
to get mole ratio
Yes
Multiply by smallest
factor that will result
in whole-number ratio
Is
mole ratio
simple, whole
numbers
?
No
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Example
1.663 g of a C-H-O compound is combusted,
producing 3.48 g of CO2 and 0.712 g of H2O.
What is the empirical formula of the
compound?
3.48 g CO 2
Amt. C =
44.01 g CO 2 1 mol CO 2
= 0.0791 mol C
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Example
2 mol H
1 mol H 2 O
0
.712
g
H
O
2
Amt H =
18.02 g H 2 O 1 mol H 2 O
= 0.0790 mol H
Example
The remainder of the compound is O
Mass of O = Mass of Cmpd - Mass of C+H
= 1.663 g - 1.030 g
= 0.633 g
Moles of O = (0.633 g)/(16.00 g mol-1)
= 0.0396 mol
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Example
The mole ratio, C:H:O is
0.0791 : 0.0790 : 0.0396
Or, dividing by 0.0396,
2.00 : 1.99 : 1
Therefore, the empirical formula is C2H2O
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Suggested Chapter 3
Exercises
Review Questions: 16-22.
Problems by Topic, Cumulative Problems,
Challenge Problems: 87, 89, 91, 95, 99, 107,
109, 113, 115, 117, 121, 125, 131, 139,
149.
Note: answers to all odd-numbered
problems are found in Appendix III.
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Balancing Chemical
Equations
Please review 4.2 (self-study) to remind
yourself how to write balanced chemical
equations.
The balanced chemical equation is key to
stoichiometry.
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Stoichiometry
Quantitative aspects of reactions
Relative moles of species in the reaction
Key: balanced chemical equation
From the equation can derive mole ratios
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Stoichiometric Ratios
Found from stoichiometric equation
Convert between equivalent molar amounts
of reactants and products in a particular
reaction
Treated like unit conversion factors
2 mol H
1 mol H 2 O
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Warning! Warning!
Danger!
0.5 mol O 2
1 mol H 2
1 mol H 2O
0.5 mol O 2
1 mol H 2
1 mol H 2 O
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Typical Pitfall
Students sometimes use stoichiometric ratios
with mass data, without converting to moles
e.g. Find mass O2 reqd to form 16.7 g Fe2O3
from Fe3O4?
0.5 O 2
mass O2 = 16.7 g Fe2O3
3 Fe 2 O3
G
= 2.78OgNO
2
R
W
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0.5 mol O 2
1 mol Fe 2 O3
Convert to
Convert to
32.00 g O 2 moles O
-2
moles
2
mass O2 = 1.7410 mol O2 Fe2O3
= 0.557 g O2
1 mol O 2
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Take-Home Message
In chemistry, the fundamental unit of amount
of a substance is the mole
Stoichiometry shows quantitative relationship
between reactants and products in a reaction
Stoichiometric info is summarised in the
balanced chemical equation
Data in mass units usually has to be converted
to moles before it is of ANY use
The conversion factor between mass and
moles is the molar mass (units: g mol-1)
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Concept: Limiting
Reagents
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Solution
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Solution
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LC: Yield
Consider the following reaction:
2 SO2 (g) + O2 (g) + 2 H2O (l) 2 H2SO4 (aq)
Molar masses are: MSO2 = 64.06; MH2SO4 = 98.08; MO2 =
32.00.
In this reaction, 21.0 g of SO 2 reacts with 5.00 g of O2
and an excess amount of H2O.
What mass of H2SO4 is produced?
A. 0.312 g H2SO4
B. 0.328 g H2SO4
C. 26.0 g H2SO4
D. 30.6 g H2SO4
E. 32.2 g H2SO4
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Solution
Convert to mass:
(0.312 mol H2SO4)(98.07 g/mol) = 30.6 g H2SO4
This is the Theoretical Yield of H2SO4
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Theoretical Yield
Theoretical yield: Mass of product formed if
a reaction goes to completion (limiting
reagent completely consumed)
Percent yield: Ratio of actual mass of
product formed, divided by the theoretical
yield, expressed as a percentage.
N.B. To find the theoretical yield, you must
first determine the limiting reagent.
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Example
4.21g of cyclohexene (C6H10) reacts in
presence of 10.0 g Br2 to form 12.1 g of
1,2-dibromocyclohexane (C6H10Br2) as:
C6H10 (l) + Br2 (l) C6H10Br2 (l)
Find the theoretical and percent yields:
McHx= 82.14 g/mol
MBr2=
159.8 g/mol
McHxBr2 =
241.9 g/mol
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Solution
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Solution
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Solution
Step 3: Find theoretical yield of C6H10Br2
amount: (0.0512 mol C6H10)(1mol C6H10Br2/1mol
C6H10)
= 0.0512 mol C6H10Br2
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Solution
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Summary
Stoichiometry is the quantitative
relationship between the reactants and
products
Think in MOLES!
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Suggested Chapter 4
Exercises
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