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UNIT VII Stoichiometry

UNIT VII

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UNIT VII. Stoichiometry. VII.1 Coefficients in a Reaction Equation:. Stoichiometry : the relationship between the amount of reactants used in a chemical reaction and the amounts of products produced by the reaction. VII.1 Coefficients in a Reaction Equation:. 2Mg + O 2 → 2MgO - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: UNIT VII

UNIT VIIStoichiometry

Page 2: UNIT VII

VII.1 COEFFICIENTS IN A REACTION EQUATION:

Stoichiometry: the relationship between the amount of reactants used in a chemical reaction and the amounts of products produced by the reaction

Page 3: UNIT VII

VII.1 COEFFICIENTS IN A REACTION EQUATION:

2Mg + O2 → 2MgO

  the coefficient 2, means two magnesium

atoms react with one oxygen molecule to produce two molecules of magnesium oxide

if you double the amounts of Mg and O2, what will happen to the amount of MgO???

if you use 10 times the amount of reactants, what will happen to the amount of MgO???

Page 4: UNIT VII

VII.1 COEFFICIENTS IN A REACTION EQUATION:

*the balanced equation describes the ratio in which the substances combine

  In terms of MOLES:

2(6.02 x 1023)Mg + (6.02 x 1023)O2 → 2(6.02 x 1023)MgO

  2 mol Mg + 1 mol O2 → 2 mol MgO

  The ratio Mg = 2 2 mol Mg

O2 1 1 mol O2

Page 5: UNIT VII

VII.1 COEFFICIENTS IN A REACTION EQUATION:

Ex: Consider the reaction equation 2Na + C2 → 2

NaCl a.)How many molecules of Na are required to

react with 10 molecules of H2?

b.) How many moles of NaCl are produced when 15 mol of Na are reacted?

p. 124 #1-5

Page 6: UNIT VII

VII.2 STOICHIOMETRY CALCULATIONS INVOLVING MOLES, MASS, AND GAS VOLUME AND MOLECULES

* A chemical equation is written in terms of moles of reactants and products

To predict the moles of each substance, you can use the mole ratio

Stoichiometry calculations allow you to calculate the amount of CHEMICAL #1 involved in a reaction, based on the amount of CHEMICAL #2

Page 7: UNIT VII

VII.2 STOICHIOMETRY CALCULATIONS INVOLVING MOLES, MASS, AND GAS VOLUME AND MOLECULES

**From UNIT V, we know how to get from L to moles, g to moles, molecules to moles etc....

MOLES are the way to go from CHEMICAL #1 to CHEMICAL #2

MOLES of MOLES ofCHEMICAL

CHEMICAL #1 #2

ALWAYS convert your values into moles ---- then cross the mole bridge!!

Page 8: UNIT VII

VII.2 STOICHIOMETRY CALCULATIONS INVOLVING MOLES, MASS, AND GAS VOLUME AND MOLECULES

Ex #1:How many moles of sodium metal would be needed to react with chlorine gas and make 737 g of sodium chloride?2Na + Cl2 → 2NaCl

Page 9: UNIT VII

VII.2 STOICHIOMETRY CALCULATIONS INVOLVING MOLES, MASS, AND GAS VOLUME AND MOLECULES

Ex: #2How many grams of potassium chloride, KCl, are produced by decomposing118 g of potassium chlorate, KClO3?

Page 10: UNIT VII

VII.2 STOICHIOMETRY CALCULATIONS INVOLVING MOLES, MASS, AND GAS VOLUME AND MOLECULES

Ex: #3C3H8(g) + 5O2(g) → 3CO2(g) + 4H2O(l)

A sample of propane is burned, what mass of H2O(l) is produced if the reaction also produces 50.0L of CO2(g) at STP?

Page 11: UNIT VII

VII.2 STOICHIOMETRY CALCULATIONS INVOLVING MOLES, MASS, AND GAS VOLUME AND MOLECULES

Ex: #4Consider the reaction…

4NH3 + 5O2 → 6H2O + 4NO

How many molecules of NH3 are required to react with 3.00 mol of O2(g)?

p. 127 # 6-7 ace, 8-12

Page 12: UNIT VII

VII.3 STOICHIOMETRY CALCULATIONS INVOLVING MOLAR CONCENTRATION

Molar Concentration:

c = n/V

only use 22.4L/mol if it is a gas at STP

Page 13: UNIT VII

VII.3 STOICHIOMETRY CALCULATIONS INVOLVING MOLAR CONCENTRATION

Ex: # 1If copper wire is put in a solution of silver nitrate, how many grams of copper will react to completely replace silver from 208 mL of 0.100M solution of silver nitrate, AgNO3?

Write the balanced equation for the reaction!

Page 14: UNIT VII

VII.3 STOICHIOMETRY CALCULATIONS INVOLVING MOLAR CONCENTRATION

Ex: #2For the reaction: Zn + 2HCl → ZnCl2 + H2

a) What volume of 3.00 M HCl is required to react with 12.35g of zinc?

Page 15: UNIT VII

VII.3 STOICHIOMETRY CALCULATIONS INVOLVING MOLAR CONCENTRATION

Ex: #2 (continued)For the reaction: Zn + 2HCl → ZnCl2 + H2

b) How many moles of hydrogen are produced when 12.35g of zinc are reacted with the correct amount of HCl?

Page 16: UNIT VII

VII.3 STOICHIOMETRY CALCULATIONS INVOLVING MOLAR CONCENTRATION

Ex: #3What volume of CO2(g) at STP is produced if 2.30 L of 0.5 M HCl reacts with an excess of CaCO3?

Page 17: UNIT VII

VII.3 STOICHIOMETRY CALCULATIONS INVOLVING MOLAR CONCENTRATION

TITRATIONS

Definition: a process used to determine the unknown concentration of a solution (SAMPLE) by reacting it with a measured amount of a solution with known concentration (STANDARD) until a desired equivalence point is reached.

Page 18: UNIT VII

VII.3 STOICHIOMETRY CALCULATIONS INVOLVING MOLAR CONCENTRATION

Equivalence Point = Stoichiometric Point

point in titration where the ratio of the moles of each species involved exactly equals the ratio of the coefficients of the species in the balanced reaction equation

 Ratio of COEFFICIENTS = Ratio of MOLES PRESENT

@ this point the indicator changes colour

Page 19: UNIT VII

VII.3 STOICHIOMETRY CALCULATIONS INVOLVING MOLAR CONCENTRATION

Ex: #1H3PO4 + 2KOH → K2HPO4 + 2H2O

What volume of 0.500 M KOH is required to react with 125mL of 0.300 M H3PO4 in order to produce a solution of K2HPO4?

Page 20: UNIT VII

VII.3 STOICHIOMETRY CALCULATIONS INVOLVING MOLAR CONCENTRATION

Ex: #2H3PO4 + 2KOH → K2HPO4 + 2H2O

If 19.8 mL of H3PO4 with an unknown molarity react with 25.0 mL of 0.500 M KOH, according to the above reaction, what is the molarity of the H3PO4?

p. 131 #17-24 - try #25!

Page 21: UNIT VII

VII.4 STOICHIOMETRY OF EXCESS QUANTITIES

Often in a reaction, not all of the reactants are used up – frequently one or more reactants are in excess

  LIMITING REAGENT: is the reactant you run

out of first  EXCESS REAGENT: is the one you have left

over

Page 22: UNIT VII

VII.4 STOICHIOMETRY OF EXCESS QUANTITIES

ex: you are given one dozen loaves of bread, a gallon of mustard and three pieces of salami – how many salami sandwiches can you make???

Limiting reagent = Salami

Excess reagents: bread and mustard

the limiting reagent determines how much product you can make

Page 23: UNIT VII

VII.4 STOICHIOMETRY OF EXCESS QUANTITIES

In order to FIND OUT which reactant is limiting…you do TWO stoichiometry problems:

the one that makes the least product is the limiting reagent!!

Page 24: UNIT VII

VII.4 STOICHIOMETRY OF EXCESS QUANTITIES

Ex: #1Copper reacts with sulfur to form copper (I) sulfide. If 10.6g of copper reacts with 3.83g of S how much product will be formed?

Page 25: UNIT VII

VII.4 STOICHIOMETRY OF EXCESS QUANTITIES

Ex: #2Mg(s) + 2HCl(g) → MgCl2(s) + H2(g)

If 10.1 mol of magnesium and 4.87 mol of HCl gas are reacted, how many moles of gas will be produced? How much excess reagent remains?

Page 26: UNIT VII

VII.4 STOICHIOMETRY OF EXCESS QUANTITIES

Ex: #3If 10.3 g of aluminum are reacted with 51.7g of CuSO4 how much copper will be produced? How much excess reagent will remain?

Page 27: UNIT VII

VII.4 STOICHIOMETRY OF EXCESS QUANTITIES

Ex: #4When 79.1 g of zinc are reacted with 1.05L of 2.00M HCl, to produce ZnCl2, and H2

gas, which reactant will be in excess and by how much?

p. 133 # 26-32