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Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and Aqueous Reactions

Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and Aqueous Reactions

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Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and Aqueous Reactions. 1 mol. 2 mol. 1 mol. 2 mol. CH 4 (g) + 2O 2 (g) → CO 2 (g) + 2H 2 O (g). Stoichiometry of the reaction. FIXED ratio for each reaction. If the amount of one chemical is known we can calculate - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and Aqueous Reactions

Page 2: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

CH4 (g) + 2O2 (g) → CO2 (g) + 2H2O (g)

1 mol 2 mol 1 mol 2 mol

Stoichiometry of the reaction

FIXED ratio for each reaction

If the amount of one chemical is known we can calculate how much other chemicals are required or produced.

Page 3: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

CH4 (g) + 2O2 (g) → CO2 (g) + 2H2O (g)

1 mol 2 mol 1 mol 2 mol

2 mol 4 mol 2 mol 4 mol

3 mol 6 mol 3 mol 6 mol

5.22 mol 10.44 mol 5.22 mol 10.44 mol

Page 4: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

4 NH3 (g) + 5 O2 (g) → 4 NO (g) + 6 H2O (g)

6.02 mol of NH3 is used in the above reaction.

How many moles of O2 is required to react with all the NH3?

How many moles of H2O will be produced?

Page 5: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

2NH3(g) + 3CuO(s) → N2(g) + 3Cu(s) + 3H2O(g)

2 mol 3 mol 1 mol 3 mol 3 mol

6.02 mol x y z u

2 mol 6.02 mol 2

3 mol x 3 x 9.03 mol

2 6.02 mol

1 y y 3.01 mol

2 6.02 mol

3 z z 9.03 mol

2 6.02 mol

3 u u 9.03 mol

Page 6: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

2NH3(g) + 3CuO(s) → N2(g) + 3Cu(s) + 3H2O(g)

2 mol 3 mol 1 mol 3 mol 3 mol

6.04 g

x y

x

mol 0.355

3

2 mol 0.533x

y

mol 0.355

1

2 mol 0.178 y

6.04 g ÷ (14.01 g/mol x 1 + 1.008 g/mol x 3) = 0.355 mol

0.355 mol

mass? mass?

Mass of CuO = 0.533 mol x 79.55 g/mol = 42.4 g

Mass of N2 = 0.178 mol x 28.02 g/mol = 4.99 g

Page 7: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

Other Examples: page 143 ― 144

Page 8: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions
Page 9: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

CH4 + 2O2 → CO2 + 2H2O

0 mol 0 mol1 mol 2 molinitial:

0 mol 0 mol 1 mol 2 molfinal:

1 mol 1 mol 0 mol 0 molinitial:

? mol ? mol ? mol ? molfinal:

The actual amount of reactants consumed and actual amountof products produced agree with the stoichiometry.

Page 10: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

CH4 + 2O2 → CO2 + 2H2O

1 mol 1 mol 0 mol 0 molinitial:

1 mol CH4 requires 2 mol O2, available O2 is 1 mol: limiting reagent.

(1 − 0.5) mol 0 mol = 0.5 mol = 1 mol

Result: 1 mol O2 will be consumed completely.

= 0.5 molconsumed: 1 molx

mol 1

x

2

1 x = 0.5 mol

final: y z

CH4 will have leftover: excess reagent.

Page 11: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

The reactant of which there are fewer moles than the stoichiometry requires is the limiting reagent.

The reactant of which there are more moles than thestoichiometry requires is the excess reagent.

Chemical reactions always occur according to thestoichiometry, therefore the limiting reagent is consumedand the excess reagent has leftover. The amount of productsis determined by the amounts of reagents that are actually consumed.

Page 12: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

CH4 + 2O2 → CO2 + 2H2O

limiting reagentexcess reagent

1 mol 1 mol 0 mol 0 molinitial:

consumed: 0.5 mol 1 mol

(1 − 0.5) molfinal: 0 mol 0.5 mol 1 mol

0.5 : 1 : 0.5 : 1

1 : 2 : 1 : 2=

Page 13: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

++

+++ +

+ +

Page 14: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

2 slices of bread + 1 slice if ham → 1 sandwich

4 slices of bread + 1 slice if ham →

excess reagent excess reagentleftover

limiting reagent amount of product

1 sandwich + 2 slices of bread

Page 15: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

For the following reaction, if a sample containing 18.1 g of NH3

reacted with 90.4 g of CuO, which is the limiting reagent? How

many grams of N2 will be formed?

How many grams of excess reagent will be leftover?

If 6.63 g of N2 is actually produced, what is the percent yield?

% 100 yieldltheoretica

yieldactual eldpercent yi

NH3(g) + CuO(s) → N2(g) + Cu(s) + H2O(g)

Page 16: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

1) Make sure the equation is balanced.2) Find the moles of each reactant:

moles = mass in gram / molar mass3) Pick up any reactant, say A, and use the stoichiometry to

calculate the required amount of the other reactant B.4) Compare the required amount of B with the available

amount of B.a) If required > available, then B is the limiting reagent and Ais the excess reagent.b) If required < available, then B is the excess reagent and Ais the limiting reagent.

5) Use the amount of the limiting reagent and the stoichiometryto calculate the amount of any product and the amount of theexcess reagent that has been consumed.

6) Leftover excess reagent = available − consumed7) If actual yield is given

percent yield = (actually yield / theoretical yield) x 100%

Procedure for limiting/excess reagent calculationsaA + bB → cC + dD

Page 17: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

Problem Set 7

Page 18: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions
Page 19: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

Review problem sets 6 & 7

Review experiment 11

Page 20: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions
Page 21: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions
Page 22: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

Midterm Exam

Time: next week during lab session

Material covered: up to this point

Problem sets are very helpful

Page 23: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

Classification of Matter

Matter

Elements

Compounds

Mixtures(multiple components)

Pure Substances(one component)

Homogeneous(visibly indistinguishable)

Heterogeneous (visibly distinguishable)

(Solutions)

Page 24: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

Solute + Solvent = Solution

Solvent = water, aqueous solution

Water can dissolve many substances

Page 25: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

O

H H

H2O

Page 26: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions
Page 27: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

Solution conducts electricity well

Page 28: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

C12H22O11

Page 29: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

Solution does not conduct electricity

Page 30: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

Solution conducts electricity, but weakly

Page 31: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

electrolytes

nonelectrolytes

Based on the electrical conductivity in aqueous solution

strong electrolytes

weak electrolytessolutes

Page 32: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

strong electrolytes: dissociate 100 % into ions

weak electrolytes: only a small fraction dissociate into ions

nonelectrolytes: no dissociation

Page 33: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions
Page 34: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

salts: NaCl, K2SO4, ……

strong acids: HCl, HNO3, H2SO4, HClO4

strong bases: NaOH, KOH

Bases: compounds that give OH− when dissolved in water.

Strong electrolytes

weak acids: acetic acid: HC2H3O2

weak bases: ammonia: NH3

Weak electrolytes

Page 35: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

Reaction of NH3 in Water

Page 36: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

concentrations

% 100 sample wholeof mass

component of mass percent mass

% 100 solution of mass

solute of mass percent mass

no unit

Page 37: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

10. g of sugar is dissolved in 40. g of water.

What is the mass percent of sugar in this solution?

Page 38: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

moles of soluteMolarity (M)

liters of solution

Unit: mol/L or M

Page 39: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

Example 4.5, page 153

25.5 g of KBr is dissolved in water and forms a solution of 1.75 L. What is the molarity of the solution?

Example 4.6, page 154

How many liters of a 0.125 mol/L NaOH solution contains 0.255 mol of NaOH?

moles of soluteMolarity (M)

liters of solution

Page 40: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

How to prepare 1.00 L of NaCl aqueous

solution with a molarity of 1.00 mol/L?

1.00 mol NaCl + 1.00 L of H2O = 1.00 mol/L NaCl (aq)

Page 41: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions
Page 42: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

Solution Dilution

Concentrated solutions for storage, called stock solutions

stock solution + water desired solution

Page 43: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

solution of liters

solute of moles (M)Molarity

moles of solute before dilution = moles of solute after dilution

M1V1 = M2V2

M1: molarity of concentrated solutionV1: volume of concentrated solutionM2: molarity of diluted solutionV2: volume of diluted solution

Example on page 155

A lab procedure calls for 3.00 L of a 0.500 mol/L CaCl2solution. How should we prepare it from a 10.0 mol/L stocksolution?

Page 44: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions
Page 45: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

Example 4.7, page 156

To what volume should you dilute 0.200 L of a 15.0 mol/LNaOH solution to obtain a 3.00 mol/L NaOH solution?

Page 46: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions
Page 47: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

Types of reactions

Precipitation reactions

Page 48: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

NaCl(aq) + AgNO3(aq) AgCl(s) + NaNO3(aq)

formula equation

Na+(aq) + Cl−(aq) + Ag+(aq) + NO3−(aq) AgCl(s) + Na+(aq) + NO3

−(aq)

complete ionic equation

Cl−(aq) + Ag+(aq) AgCl(s)

net ionic equation

Na+(aq) + Cl−(aq) + Ag+(aq) + NO3−(aq) AgCl(s) + Na+(aq) + NO3

−(aq)

spectator ions

Page 49: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions
Page 50: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

EXAMPLE 4.9 Predicting whether an Ionic Compound Is Soluble

Predict whether each compound is soluble or insoluble.

(a) PbCl2 (b) CuCl2 (c)Ca(NO3)2 (d) BaSO4

Page 51: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions
Page 52: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

BaCl2(aq) + K2SO4(aq)

BaCl2(aq) Ba2+(aq) + 2Cl−(aq)

K2SO4(aq) 2K+ (aq) + SO42− (aq)

BaSO4(s) + 2KCl(aq)

Ba2+(aq) + 2Cl−(aq) + 2K+ (aq) + SO42− (aq) BaSO4(s) + 2Cl−(aq) + 2K+(aq)

Ba2+(aq) + SO42− (aq) BaSO4(s)

Page 53: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

BaCl2(aq) + KNO3(aq)

BaCl2(aq) Ba2+(aq) + 2Cl−(aq)

KNO3(aq) K+ (aq) + NO3− (aq)

BaCl2(aq) + 2KNO3(aq) Ba(NO3)2(aq) + 2KCl(aq)

Ba2+(aq) + 2Cl−(aq) + 2K+ (aq) + 2NO3− (aq)

Ba2+(aq) + 2NO3− (aq) + 2Cl−(aq) + 2K+(aq)

2KNO3(aq) 2K+ (aq) + 2NO3− (aq)

Page 54: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

Types of reactions

Precipitation reactions

Acid-base reactions

Page 55: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

Acid: Substance that produces H+ ions in aqueous solution

Base: Substance that produces OH− ions in aqueous solution

Page 56: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions
Page 57: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions
Page 58: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

Try to remember them

Page 59: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

NaOH(aq) Na+(aq) + OH−(aq)

H+(aq) + Cl−(aq) +Na+(aq) +OH−(aq) H2O(l) + Na+(aq) + Cl−(aq)

H+(aq) + OH−(aq) H2O(l)

HCl(aq) H+(aq) + Cl−(aq)

HCl(aq) + NaOH(aq) H2O(l) + NaCl(aq)

H+(aq) + OH−(aq) H2O(l)

acidic basic neutral

neutralization

Page 60: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

HCl(aq) H+(aq) + Cl−(aq)

What is the molarity ofHCl(aq) or H+(aq)?

Page 61: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

When reaction completes

nNaOH = nHCl

MNaOHVNaOH = MHClVHCl

HCl(aq) + NaOH(aq) H2O(l) + NaCl(aq)

prepared,known

measuredby buret, known

unknown measured bypippet, known

Page 62: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

MNaOHVNaOH = MHClVHCl

Page 63: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

Read acid-base titration starting on page 171.Read the online instruction next week for the titration experiment.

End point: light pink

Page 64: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions
Page 65: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

The titration of a 25.00-mL sample of an HCl solution of unknown concentration requires 32.54 mL of a 0.100 mol/L NaOH solution to reach the equivalence point. What is the concentration of the unknown HCl solution in mol/L?

MNaOHVNaOH = MHClVHCl

HCl(aq) + NaOH(aq) H2O(l) + NaCl(aq)

Page 66: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

Types of reactions

Precipitation reactions

Acid-base reactions

Oxidation-Reduction reactions

Page 67: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

Reactions that involve electron transfer are called

oxidation-reduction reactions, or redox reactions.

2Mg(s) + O2(g) → 2MgO(s)

Page 68: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

Oxidation number (state)

1) For atoms in its elemental form, oxidation number = 0

A way to keep track of the electrons gained or lost

Na, Ar, O2, N2, O3, P4, S8

2) For monatomic ion, oxidation number = charge of the ion

Na+, Ca2+, Co2+, Co3+, Cl−, O2−

NaCl, Na2O, CaCl2, CaO, CoCl2, CoCl3, Co2O3, CoO

Page 69: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

O

H H

H2O

Page 70: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

3) In covalent compounds

Remember O: −2 H: +1 F: −1

In a neutral compound, the sum of the oxidation number = 0

In a polyatomic ion, the sum of the oxidation number = ion charge

CO, CO2, SF6, SF4, H2S, NH3, P2O5, N2O3

NO3−, SO4

2−, NH4+, Cr2O7

2−, MnO4−

Page 71: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions
Page 72: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

Reactions that cause change of oxidation numbersare called redox reactions.

Element loses electrons → its oxidation number increases→ element is oxidized → oxidation reaction

Substance that contains the oxidized element is call thereducing agent.

Substance that contains the reduced element is call theoxidizing agent.

Element gains electrons → its oxidation number decreases→ element is reduced → reduction reaction

Page 73: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

PbO (s) + CO (g) → Pb (s) + CO2 (g)

Page 74: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

Cu − 2e− Cu2+

Page 75: Ch 4. Chemical Quantities and    Aqueous Reactions

Problem Set 8

concentrations: mass percent and molarity;precipitation reactions; redox reactions.