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CHAPTER 3 STOICHIOMETRY 3.1 – ATOMIC MASSES  Carbon-12, the relative standard C-12 is assigned a mass of exactly 12 atomic mass units (amu)  Masses of all elements are determined in comparison to the 12C atom which is the most common isotope of carbon  Comparisons are made using a mass spectrometer   Atomic Mass (average atomic mass, atomic weight) Atomic masses are the weighted average of the naturally occurring isotopes of an element  Atomic mass does not represent the mass of any actual atom  Atomic mass can be used to “weigh out” large numbers of atoms  3.2 – THE MOLE  Avogadro’s number   6.022 x 1023 units = 1 mole Measuring moles  An elements atomic mass expressed in grams contains 1 mole of that element 12.01 grams of carbon = 1 mole of carbon  12.01 grams of carbon = 6.022 x 1023 atoms of carbon 23 atoms of carbon  1 mole of carbon = 6.022 x 10  3.3 – MOLAR MASS  Molar mass is the mass in grams of one mole of a compound  The sum of the masses of the component atoms in a compound is calculated using the PTE What is the molar mass of ethane (C2H6)? 2 moles of C = 2 x 12.01 g = 24.02 g 6 moles of H = 6 x 1.008 g = 6.048 g 30.07 g/mole ethane 3.4 – PERCENT COMPOSITION  A percentage is   “The part, divided by the whole, multiplied by 100” Percent Composition  Calculate the percent composition of each element in the total mass of a compound (or sample) (# atoms of the element)(atomic mass of element) x 100 (molar mass of the compound) What is the % of sodium in sodium chloride? NaCl has a molar mass of 58.5 g/mol (23 /58.5) x 100 = 39% 3.5 – DETERMINING THE FORMULA OF A COMPOUND  Empirical formula – simplest whole number ratio of elements in a compound Determine the percentage of each element in your compound  Treat % as grams and convert grams to moles using the mass from the PTE  Find the smallest whole number ratio of atoms (multiply by an integer to make them whole numbers). A compound contains 63.5% Silver, 8.2% Nitrogen and 28.2% Oxygen. What is the empirical formula for this compound? Ag = 63.5 g/ 108 g = .59 mol This is a 1:1:3 ratio N = 8.2 g / 14 g = .59 mol Formula for this O = 28.2 g / 16 g = 1.76 mol compound is  AgNO3 3.5 – DETERMINING THE FORMULA OF A COMPOUND  Molecular formula – actual ratio of elements in a compound Calculate the empirical formula mass  Divide the known molecular mass by the empirical formula mass deriving a whole number, n  Multiply the empirical formula by n to derive the molecular formula  Ethane gas has an empirical formula of CH3 and a molecular mass of 30 g/mol. What is the molecular formula for ethane? Empirical formula mass is = 15 g/mol 30/15 = 2 2(CH3) = C2H6 3.6 – CHEMICAL EQUATIONS  Chemical Reactions Reactants are listed on the left had side of the arrow  Products are listed on the right hand side of the arrow  Atoms are neither created or destroyed  All atoms present in the reactants must be accounted for among the products, in the same number  No new atoms may appear in the products that were not present in the reactants  REACTANTS yield Zn (s) + 2 HCl (aq)  PRODUCTS ZnCl2(aq) + H2 (g) 3.6 – CHEMICAL EQUATIONS  The meaning of a chemical reaction Solid - (s)  Liquid - (l)  Gas - (g)  Dissolved in water (aqueous solution) - (aq)   Relative numbers of reactants and products  Coefficients give atomic/molecular/mole ratios Zn (s) + 2 HCl (aq)  ZnCl2(aq) + H2 (g) 3.7 – BALANCING CHEMICAL EQUATIONS  Determine what reaction is occuring   Write the unbalanced equation   Focus on writing correct atomic and compound formulas Balance the equation using an atom inventory   It is sometimes helpful to write in word form It is often helpful to work systematically from left to right Include phase information Hydrogen and oxygen gases combine to form liquid water 3.8 – STOICHIOMETRIC CALCULATIONS Balance the chemical equation  Convert grams of reactant (or product) to moles, if required  Compare moles of the known value to moles of desired substance (mole ratio)  Convert from moles back to grams if required  If 5 g of Zn reacts with excess hydrochloric acid, how many grams of zinc chloride are formed? 3.9 – CALCULATIONS INVOLVING A LIMITING REACTANT  A concept of limiting reactant   The limiting reactant controls the amount of product that can form Solving limiting reactant problems Convert grams of both reactants to moles  Use mole ratios to determine which reactant forms the least amount (moles) of desired product  Convert the least moles to grams (if required)  If 5 g of Zn reacts with 5 g of hydrochloric acid, how many moles of hydrogen gas are formed? 3.9 – CALCULATIONS INVOLVING A LIMITING REACTANT  Calculating percent yield Actual yield – what you got by actually doing the experiment  Theoretical yield – what stoichiometric calculations say the reaction should have produced.  Actual yield (data table) Theoretical yield (Stoich) x 100 = % yield 5 g of Zn reacts with excess hydrochloric acid. 9.4 g of zinc chloride are formed. What is the percent yield for this reaction?
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            