Title: Stoichiometry Facts
1Stoichiometry Facts
- Stoichiometry is the relationship between
reactants and products in a chemical reaction - Chemical reactions stop when the reactants are
consumed. - Equations are balanced to satisfy the Law of
Conservation of Matter
2Stoichiometry Facts Contd
- We know from the balanced equation the mole ratio
between each substance in the equation ( the
ratio between the coefficients) - We can use this ratio to mathematically determine
the amounts of reactants consumed or products
produced in a chemical rxn.
3Lets look at an equation
4So We can..
- Determine the moles, grams, liters, molecules
(atoms) consumed or produced in a chemical rxn. - You will be asked to calculate the amount of
substances related to a given amount of a
substance.
5Solving Stoichiometry Problems
- There are 3 basic kinds of stoichiometry
problems. - Mass(wt)-Mass(wt),
- Mass-Volume, and
- Vol-Vol.
- The same basic information is needed to work all
3 types. The only difference is when you see
volume think 22.4 liters/mole. In these
problems, the words react with, produce, yield,
are the key words.
6Steps to solving Stoichiometry
- Complete the equation( synthesis, single
replacement, double replacement, decomposition). - Balance the equation
- Know what the equation tells you (The number of
moles of each substance reacting and produced). - Solve by proportion or factor-label
7How many g of mercury II oxide are needed to
produce 100g of mercury?
- Solution.
- 1. HgO ? Hg O2
- 2 2HgO ? 2 Hg O2
- 3. 2 moles HgO make two moles Hg
- x g 100 g2 HgO ? 2 Hg O2 2(20116)
2(201) 434 g 402 g
8- When you use proportion make sure you put your
given amount and LABEL above the correct
substance and put X and LABEL about what you are
asked to find. Only use those substances in
solving the problem. Use the correct facts to
find the numbers to go under the specific
substances. Since this problem asks and uses
grams we will use the P.T. because we know that 1
mole of each substance in grams can be found on
the P.T.Multiply the coefficient (number of
moles) times the wt off the table and that is the
number that goes below the substance. Now just
set up the proportion and solve.
9- Factor-Label
- 100 g Hg x 1mole Hg x 2 mole HgO x 217g HgO
201 g Hg 2 mole Hg 1 mole HgO
10- For factor label always start with your given.
- Now multiply by a fact that will allow us to get
where we want to go. - Since we have grams and need moles (why? Because
that is what the equation tells us. always get
to moles!!!) - Use your conversion factor(1 mole mass off P.T.)
to get from your given to moles.
11- Next convert from your substance to the
substance you want by using the coefficients.
Remember Coeff moles. - Last convert from moles to the correct label.
12Another Example
- How many liters of oxygen will be produced when
150 g of mercury(II) oxide decomposes?This is a
vol-mass problem
13- 2 HgO ? 2 Hg O2
- 2 moles HgO make 1 mole O2 150 g
x liters2 HgO ? 2 Hg O2 2(20116)
1(22.4) 434 g 22.4 liters - 150 g x434g 22.4L
14Factor-Label
- Since this problem uses mass we go to the table
but the 2nd part uses liters so we now use the
molar volume information from earlier (1 mole
22.4 L) NOT PERIODIC TABLE - 150g HgO x 1mole HgO x 1mole O2 x 22.4liters
217 g HgO 2 mole HgO 1 mole O2
15- Exactly the same as before. Using our guide
- we take the given,
- change to moles,
- put coeff of what we want over coeff of what we
have - then change to the label we want. Since this
wants liters we use the fact 1 mole 22.4L
16Another Example
- How many liters of hydrogen are needed to react
with nitrogen to produce 400 liters of ammonia - This is a vol-vol problem
17Solution.
- 1. N2 H2 ? NH3
- 2. N2 3 H2 ? 2 NH3
- 3. 3 moles H2 make 2 mole NH3
- 4. x liters 400 liters
N2 3 H2 ? 2 NH3
3(22.4) 2(22.4) 67.2L
44.8 liters
18Factor-Label
- 400 L NH3 x 1 mole NH3 x 3 mole H2 x 22.4 L
H2 22.4 L NH3 2
mole NH3 1 mole H2
19Complications
- The chemical equation is the recipe for the
reaction. When reactants are added to start a
chemical rxn, they may be present in any amount.
Think about our lab. We put in 3g NaHCO3 and
only 1 drop of HCl. It fizzed and stopped. The
rxn wasnt complete though because as we added
more HCl the rxn continued.
20Contd
- Because we didnt have enough HCl to react with
all of the NaHCO3. The rxn cant finish unless
the correct amount of reactants are present. - The balanced equation tells us the exact amount
of each substance needed. - Sometimes we are not given the exact amounts
necessary.
21Limiting and Excess
- Reactions proceed until one of the reactants is
used up and one is left in excess. - The limiting reactant (reagent) is the substance
that limits the extent of the reaction and,
thereby, determines the amount of product formed. - The excess reactant (reagent) are all the
leftover unused reactants.
22Identifying Limiting Reagents
- If we look at the synthesis of water,
- 2H2 O2 ? 2 H2O
- Lets say we are given that we have 20g of
hydrogen mixed with 40 grams of oxygen. We can
calculate the moles of each of these. - 10 mol Hydrogen 1.25 mol oxygen
- Because we have a mole ratio of 21 we know we
need twice as much Hydrogen as oxygen.
23Identifying Limiting Reagents Contd
- Our given ratio is 10 mol Hydrogen 1.25 mol
oxygen or 81 - Since our equation tells us we need a ratio of
21 we know hydrogen is present in an amount
greater than we need (excess) and oxygen is
present in a smaller amount (limiting) so it will
ultimately determine how much product we can make.
24Limiting Reactants(Reagents)
- These are special stoichiometry problems. You
can recognize these stoichiometry problems
because you will be given of amounts of all the
reactants and then they will ask for an amount of
any or all of the products.
25- The most straightforward way to work this kind is
to work two problems and the smaller answer is
the amount of product you can make. The reactant
that produces that smaller amount is the limiting
reactant.(Method 1)
26- Another way is to determine which substance is
the smaller number of moles. - If g use P.T. and vol use 22.4. then use the
ratio of the reactants to find which substance is
the smaller. Use that one to solve the problem.
(Method 2)
27Find the limiting reactant and the amount of
ammonia produced when 6g of hydrogen react with
14g of nitrogen.
- Obviously a limiting reagent problem because it
asks for it in the question. - Also you know because you are given the amounts
of two substances
28Method 1 Solution.
- 1. N2 H2 ? NH3
- 2. N2 3 H2 ? 2 NH3
- 3. 3 moles H2 make 2 mole NH314g 6g
x g - N2 3 H2 ? 2 NH328g 3(2g) 2(17g)14g
x 17 g ammonia produced by nitrogen28 g
34g
29Now do the other part
- 6g x 6 g 34g
- 34 g ammonia produced by hydrogen
- Since 17g is the smaller number, it is the amount
produced and nitrogen is the limiting reactant
30Factor-Label
- 14g N2 x 1 mole N2 x 2 mole NH3 x 17g NH3
28g N2 1 mole N2 1 mole NH3
17g - 6g H2 x 1 mole H2 x 2 mole NH3 x 17g NH3
2g H2 3 mole H2 1 mole NH3 - 34g NH3
31Method 2 Determine Limiting Rgt
- 14 g nitrogen 0.5 moles and
- 6g hydrogen 3 moles
- the coefficients tell us that we need 3 moles of
hydrogen to react with 1 mole of nitrogen. - 0.5 moles N2 need 1.5 moles of H2.
- We have 3 moles H2, which is an excess of what is
needed. Therefore N2 is the limiting reactant. - Now work the problem like any mass-mass problem.
32 Yield
- These are normal stoichiometry problems with a
equation added. In these it might be best to
remember (actual/theo) times 100. - The answer to the stoich problem is the amount
you are supposed to get (theoretical) and the
amount actually produced is the actual. - If you like to think part/whole. The calculated
number is the whole (the total amt you are
supposed to get) and the amt given as produced is
the part
33Calculate the yield if when 14 g of nitrogen
reacts with hydrogen and 15 g of ammonia is
produced
- Solution. 1. N2 H2 ? NH3
- 2. N2 3 H2 ? 2 NH3
- 3. 3 moles H2 make 2 mole NH3
- 4. 14g x g
- N2 3 H2 ? 2 NH3
- 28g 3(2g) 2(17g)
34Calculate the yield if when 14 g of nitrogen
reacts with hydrogen and 15 g of ammonia is
produced
- Solution. Â Â Â 15g is the actual yield
- Â Â Â Â actual x 100
- theoretical
- 15g x 100 88
- 17g
35Calculate the yield if when 14 g of nitrogen
reacts with hydrogen and 15 g of ammonia is
produced
- Factor-Label
- 14g N2 x 1 mole N2 x 2 mole NH3 x 17g NH3
28g N2 1 mole N2 1 mole NH3 - 17g
- 15g is the actual yield
- Â Â Â Â Â actual x 100 15 X 100
88 - theoretical 17
36Here are your rules
- Factor-Label
- Mass-Mass
- Given(g) x 1 mole x Coeff want x PT g
PTg Coeff given 1 mole - Mass-VolGiven(g) x 1 mole x Coeff want x
22.4 L PTg Coeff
given 1 mole - Vol-Vol Given(L) x 1 mole x Coeff want x
22.4 L 22.4L Coeff
given 1 mole
37Here are your rules
- Math (Proportion)
- Mass-Mass
- Given(g) want(g) Coeff x PT
Coeff x PT - Mass-Vol Given(g) want(L) Coeff x
PT Coeff x 22.4L - Vol-Vol Given(L) want(L) Coeff
x22.4L Coeff x 22.4L
38Here are your rules
- Limiting Rgt
- You will have 2 givens.
- Work two problems, use the smallest answer
- Yield
- Work problem
- Take your answer divide it into the amt given
39Here are your rules-Variations
- Mole-Mole
- Given mol x Coeff want
Coeff given - Mole-Mass
- Given(mol) Coeff want x PT g
Coeff given 1 mole - What is excess (How much excess)
- Cal amt needed to react with other reactant,
subtract from the amt given.
40Here are your rules-Variations
- Mole-Mole
- Given mol want Coeff Coeff
- Mole-Mass
- Given(mol) want
- Coeff Coeff xPT
- What is excess (How much excess)
- Cal amt needed to react with other reactant,
subtract from the amt given.
41Calculating Excess Reactant
- When we have a limiting reactant problem we use
the limiting reagent to calculate the amount of
product produced. - We can also use it to determine the amount of the
excess reactant needed to react with this
limiting reagent. (Normal Stoich problem)
42Calculating Amount of Excess Reactant
- Once we calculate the amount of the excess
reactant that is consumed, we can calculate the
amount that remains - (amt given-amt used amt remaining)
43If we use our example earlier
- 14g 6g x g N2 3 H2 ? 2 NH328g
3(2g) 2(17g)14g x 3g H2 consumed
by reacting with 28 g 6g nitrogenNow
since we started with 6g and used 3g, the amount
in excess is 6g-3g 3g
44Factor Label Method
- 14g N2 x 1 mole N2 x 2 mole H2 x 2g H2
28g N2 1 mole N2 1 mole H2
3g H2Now take your given and subtract
the amount used - 6g-3g 3g