Title: Welcome to the MOLE
1Welcome to the MOLE
2What is a mole?
- This is not such a bad
- mole, but not what we
- need to discuss. . .
3This little stinker is just plain mean and ugly.
. .
4- and the Mole People are in the dark and clueless.
. . . .
5We are discussing the Mole used in Chemistry
- Avogadros Number (NA)
- or 6.02214179 x 10 23
- shortened to
- 6.022 x 1023
- This amount 1 mole
6The mole is a way to describe the number of
something without writing a huge number.
- It is similar to common terms like dozen, gross
or even p in geometry - 1 mole of anything atoms, molecules,
cockroaches or even galaxies will number 6.022 x
1023 - We need a number like this since atoms and
molecules are extremely small and so many take up
such a small space
7Key Equations KNOW THESE!
- Divide by Molar Mass x by NA
- Grams Number
- (mass) of Moles of of
- Substance Substance Particles
- x by Molar Mass Divide by NA
- Molar Mass Atomic Weight in Grams per Mole
- (g/mol)
8- Molar Mass is the mass (g) of 1 mole of an
element - For example Na is 22.989 amu which is 22.989 g,
and 1 mole of Na 22.989 g - CO2 is 1 Carbon at 12.011 g and 2 Oxygens at
15.999 each therefore the molar mass of CO2
S of 1 C 2 O 44 g - Mass (m) mols x g
- mols m / g
9- Mols m / Molar Mass
- Composition by Mass m element x 100
-
m compound - Mols Concentration (Molar) x Volume (L)
- Volume mols / Concentration
10Heres a trick to find the needed equation,
just cover up the wanted result and what is left
is the equation!
- Mass
Mols - Atomic X Mols Concentration X
Volume - Mass
11The Mole Concept
- Atomic Mass (or atomic weight) is the mass of the
element in amu (µ) - It is the number under the elemental symbol
- Simply make this number into grams (g)
- This represents the mass (m) of 1 mole of that
element and/or the m of 6.022 x 1023 atoms of
that substance! - 1 mole of any gas 22.4 L
12- Mole (mol) is the of atoms, ions, molecules
that is equal to NA - Molar Mass (M) this is the m in g of 1 mol of a
substance (g/mol) - Example Manganese 54.94 µ, thus its
- M 54.94 g/mol
- and 54.94 g of Mn will contain 6.022 x 1023 atoms
- and this is equal to 1 mol of Mn
13- Mass to Mole Calculations
- Remember each
- element has a different
- amu and thus, 1 mol of
- each will differ in mass
- The Mass of a Mole
- Uses the C 12 isotope as its standard
- H µ of 1 or 1/12 of 1 atom of C 12
- He has µ of 4 or 4/12 (1/3) of a C 12 atom
- Remember atomic masses use isotopes and their
abundance in nature to calculate and the closer
to a whole number the fewer the isotopes -
14- I. Molar Mass of Substance Grams Substance
-
1 mol Substance - Therefore
- 1. Mols of A grams of A given x 1 mol A
-
gram A - 2. Mass of B Mols of B given x gram B
-
1 mol B -
15Examples
- 3 mol Mn ? Grams
- 3 mol Mn X 54.9 g Mn 165 g Mn
- 1 mol Mn
- 25 g Au ? Mols
- 25 g Au x 1 mol Au 25
0.127 mol Au - 196.97 g Au 196.97
- 0.127 mols Au ? Atoms
- 0.127 mol Au x 6.022 x 1023 7.65 x
1022 atoms Au - 1 mol Au
16II. Moles to Mass
- Mols (given) x grams mass
- 1 mol
- Example
- 2.5 mol of (C3H5)2S has what mass?
- M 1 mol S 32.07 g
- 6 mol C 6 x 12.01 72
g - 10 mol H 10 x 1 10 g
- S
114.07 g/mol - 2.5 mol x 114.07 g 286 g
- 1 mol
17We just used the bottom left of the diagram!
- Divide by Molar Mass x by NA
- Grams Number
- (mass) of Moles of of
- Substance Substance Particles
- x by Molar Mass Divide by NA
- Molar Mass Atomic Weight in Grams per
Mole - (g/mol)
18III. Mass to Moles with Compounds
- Example
- m of Ca(OH)2 325 g (rounded off)
- M ?
- mols ?
- M 1 mol Ca 40.08 g
- 2 mol O 2 x 16 32 g
- 2 mol H 2 x 1 2 g
- S
74.096 g/mol - Given m of 325 g Ca(OH)2 x 1 mol Ca(OH)2
4.3 mol -
M of 74.096 g
19IV. Mass (g) to Particles
- Mols x NA Particles
- Example
- m 35.6 g of AlCl3
- What is the number of Al3 and Cl- ions?
- M Al 26.981 g/mol
- Cl 35.452 g/mol x 3 106.356
- S
133.337 - Mols Al m given _____ mols x
NA _____ Al ions - 26.981 g/mol
- Mols Cl m given _____ mols
x NA _____ Cl ions - 106.356 g/mol
-
Continued
20- And 35.6 g AlCl3
0.267 mol - 133.337 g/mol AlCl3
- 0.267 mol AlCl3 x (6.022 x 1023)
- 1.6 x 10 23
molecules
21V. Percent Composition of Compounds
- Mass Element (m) x 100 by mass
- Mass Cmpd (M)
- Example
- H2O what percent is H and what percent is O?
- H 2 x 1 (the molar mass of H) 2 x
100 11.2 - (the molar mass of H2O)
18 - Thus, all compounds equal 100, so 100 11.2
88.8 for O
22- What is the of C and O in CO2?
- g C x 100 12.01 C x 100
27.29 - total g CO2 44.01 g CO2
- 32 g O x 100 72.71
- 44.01 g CO2
23Example
- H3PO4 (aq) (Phosphoric Acid)
- H 3 g H x 100 3
- M 98 g
- P 31 g P x 100 32
- 98 g
- O 64 g O x 100 65
- 98 g
- m Compound H (3 x 1) P (1 x 31) O (4 x 16)
98 g
24VI. Mole Ratios
- Given Vitamin C (ascorbic acid) with the
following percentages, determine formula - 40.92 C
- 4.58 H
- 54.5 O
- Set up with unknown moles (n)
- nC 40.92 g C / 12.01 g C 3.4 mol C
- nH 4.58 g H / 1.00 g H 4.5 mol H
- nO 54.5 g O / 16 g O 3.4 mol O
-
- This is the Mole
Ratio -
25- Set Mole Ratio values as subscripts
- Divide each by the lowest value
- C 3.4 / 3.4 H 4.5 / 3.4 O 3.4 / 3.4
- C 1 H 1.33 O 1
- The 1.33 on H needs to be ?d into integer
- Do this by multiplying until closest to a whole
number - 1.33 x 2 2.66
- 1.33 x 3 3.99 which can be rounded off to 4
- So the magic number is 3 must multiply all
subscripts by 3 - Result is C1 x 3H1.33 x 3O1 x 3 or C3H4O3!
26What is the molecular formula that has 92.2 C
and 7.8H. The molar mass is 52.1.
- First assume a 100 g sample of the substance
- The elements percentages are assumed to be
masses (g) - Determine the moles of elements in compound
- 92.2 g C x 1 mol C 7.68 mol C
- 12.01 g C
- 7.8 g H x 1 mol H 7.72 mol H
- 1.01 g H
- Divide all mols by the lowest value
- 7.68 C 1 mol C 7.72 H 1.01
mol H - 7.68 7.68
- Continued
27- The Empirical Formula is C1H1 (this is the basic
form) - To get the Molecular Formula
- Molar mass of the Empirical Formula is 12.01
1.01 13.02 g/mol - Molar mass of unknown is 52.1 g/mol
- So
- Molar Mass Compound Whole to
multiply - Molar Mass Emp. Formula subscripts to get
-
molecular formula - 52.1 g/mol 4
- 13.02 g/mol thus, (CH) x 4 C4H4
28Once again, a molecular formula calculation
- Given 38.7 C, 9.7 H, and 51.6 O with a
molecular formula mass of 62.0 g. What is the
true molecular formula? - First - find the empirical formula (this is
CH3O) - Find the formula mass C 1 x 12 12
- H
3 x 1.01 3.03 - O
1 x 16 16.0 -
S 31.0
29- Divide the molecular mass by the empirical
formula mass - 62 g (given) / 31 g (mass of emp. form.) 2
- Multiply each subscript by (n) or 2 in this
example. . . - Thus, the molecular formula
- (CH3O)(n) ? (CH3O)(2) ? C2H6O2
30VII. Hydrates
- Hydrates are
- substances that include
- H2O in their
- formulas, but are
- not wet!
- Hydration adding H2O
- Dehydration removing it
- Anhydrous no H2O present
31- Methane Hydrate is found on the oceans floor
- The methane will burn but the water in it keeps
the skin from burning!
32- The methane molecule (CH4) is in a cage of water
molecules - There is 1 mole CH4 per 5.75 mols H2O
- It is found at depths of 300 meters or more
- There is an estimated 1,300 trillion cubic feet
of methane hydrate in the oceans - However the problem is that methane is one of
the major greenhouse gases which contributes to
global warming so more study on retrieval and
use is needed
33Example
- Barium Chloride Hydrate
- Mass 5 g. How many H2O per molecule?
- BaCl2____H2O
- The sample is heated and the result is 4.26 g
anhydrous BaCl2 - The difference between the 5 g hydrate and the
4.26 anhydrate is .74 g H2O -
- So. . . . . . . . .
34A common hydrate is. . .
- MgSo47H2O
- Magnesium Sulfate
- Heptahydrate
35-
- 4.26 g BaCl2 0.0205 mols BaCl2
- M 208.23 g/mol
- 0.74 g H2O 0.041 mol H2
- 18.02 g/mol
- H2O x mols H2O 0.041 2
- mols cmpd 0.0205
- Thus BaCl22H2O or barium chloride dihydrate
36Summary