Search for notes by fellow students, in your own course and all over the country.

Browse our notes for titles which look like what you need, you can preview any of the notes via a sample of the contents. After you're happy these are the notes you're after simply pop them into your shopping cart.

My Basket

You have nothing in your shopping cart yet.

Title: Stoichiometry
Description: Stoichiometry: Calculations with Chemical Equations

Document Preview

Extracts from the notes are below, to see the PDF you'll receive please use the links above


Stoichiometry:
Calculations with Chemical
Equations

Objectives
 Use chemical equations to predict amount of
product from given reactants
 Determine percentage yield
 Determine limiting reactant

Working with equations:
STOICHIOMETRY
 Predict how much product is obtained from
given amount of reactant
 Predict how much reactant is needed to give
required amount of product
 Predict how much of one reactant is
required to give optimum result with given
amount of another reactant

Relating moles, masses and
molecules
 Note:
 Conservation of mass (4 g + 32 g = 36 g)
 But not necessarily conservation of moles (2
moles + 1 mole = 2 moles)

Stoichiometry with equations:
The roadmap




Equations are in moles, but we measure in grams
Three conversions required:
A is given substance; B is target substance
1
...
Use coefficients in equation to get moles B from moles A
3
...
Convert moles A → moles B:
Mole:mole ratio (target/given):
moles B
moles A



b

mol B / mol A

a

2
...
Mass A → moles A using molar mass A
2
...
Moles B → mass B using molar mass B

Mass A

Mass/molar mass

Moles A

Mole:mole ratio

Moles B

Moles x molar
mass

Mass B

 Molar mass Cl2 = 35
...
0 g/mol
 Molar mass NaOH = 23
...
00 + 1
...
01 g/mol

Summary of stoichiometry problems


Maximum of three conversions required
1
...
Use coefficients in equation to get moles B from
moles A
3
...
Molar mass of given substance (maybe)
2
...
Balanced chemical equation (always)

Work this example
 CH4 + 2O2 = CO2 + 2H2O
 What mass of CO2 is produced by the
complete combustion of 16 g of CH4
 Atomic weight H = 1, C = 12, O = 16

44 g
 Do stoichiometry exercises

Reaction Yield
 Actual yield from chemical reaction is
normally less than predicted by
stoichiometry
...
8 g after reaction of 26
...

 What is theoretical yield? Use stoichiometry to get mass of
product:
convert mass (26
...
4 g
 Percent yield = 32
...
4 x 100 %

 Do percent yield exercises
Mass A

Mass/molar mass

Moles A

Mole:mole ratio

Moles B

Moles x molar
mass

Mass B

Percent yield practice

Limiting Reactant
 Exact quantities of reactants dictated by the
reaction stoichiometry are not the norm
 Usually one reactant is reacted with an
excess of the other(s)
 Burning natural gas in furnace

 This reactant is the limiting reactant –
amount of products limited by this reactant

Limiting reactant at molecular level
 In the reaction to produce ethylene glycol:
 1 mole of ethylene oxide + 1 mole of water → 1 mole glycol

 Here, 2 moles of water remain after conversion of all
ethylene oxide into glycol
 Ethylene oxide is limiting

 More product would be obtained by increasing the ethylene
oxide until the water became limiting

Determination of limiting reactant
 Two methods:
 Brute Force
 Calculate quantity of product from each reactant
in turn

 Elegant
 Compare reaction stoichiometry with actual
reactant mole ratios

The Brute Force method
 30 g CH4 and 30 g O2 are reacted
Title: Stoichiometry
Description: Stoichiometry: Calculations with Chemical Equations