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AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and...

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AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry
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Page 1: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

AP Chemistry Chapter 3

Stoichiometry

Page 2: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Stoichiometry

• Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions

• Derived from the Greek words stoicheion meaning “element” and metron meaning “measure”

Page 3: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Law of Conservation of Mass

• Discovered by Antoine Lavoisier in the late 1700’s– Found that the masses of substances after a

chemical reaction are equal to the masses of substances before the reaction

• Atoms are neither created nor destroyed in a chemical reaction– Reactions rearrange atoms in order to form new

substances

Page 4: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Chemical Equations

2H2 + O2 2H2O

products

coefficient“reacts with”

“produces”

reactants

subscript

Indicates relative numbersof molecules/atoms

Indicates number of atomsin a molecule

Page 5: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Balancing Equations

• To satisfy the law of conservation of mass

• Done by adding or changing coefficients

• NEVER balance an equation by changing subscripts!

Page 6: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Balancing Equations Helpful Hints:

1. Start balancing with the elements that appear in the fewest chemical formulas on each side of the equation

2. Balance oxygen last3. Balance hydrogen next to last

Page 7: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Sample Exercise 3.1The following diagram represents a chemical reaction in which the red spheres are oxygen atoms and the blue spheres are nitrogen atoms. (a) Write the chemical formula for the reactants and the products. (b) Write a balanced equation for the reaction. (c) Is the diagram consistent with the law of conservation of mass?

Page 8: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

State Symbols

• Used to indicate the states of reactants and products in chemical reactions– (g)– (l)– (s)– (aq)

• ∆ above the arrow indicates addition of heat to the reaction

Page 9: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Sample Exercise 3.2Balance this equation: Na(s) + H2O(l) NaOH(aq) + H2(g)

Page 10: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Simple Patterns in ReactionsCombination (Synthesis) Decomposition

2 or more substances react to form one product

one substance undergoes a reaction to produce 2 or more other substances

2 Mg(s) + O2(g) 2MgO(s)

2 H2(g) + O2(g) 2H2O(g)

EXAMPLES:2NaN3(s) 2Na(s) + 3N2(g)

CaCO3(s) CaO(s) + CO2(g)

EXAMPLES:

Page 11: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Decomposition Reactions

• Many compounds undergo decomposition reactions when heated.

• Metal carbonates often decompose to form a metal oxide and carbon dioxide gas.

Page 12: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Sample Problem 3.3Write balanced equations for the following reactions: (a) The combination reaction that occurs when lithium metal and fluorine gas react. (b) The decomposition reaction that occurs when solid barium carbonate is heated.(Two products form: a solid and a gas.)

Page 13: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Combustion in Air

• Reaction with oxygen

• Rapid reaction that produces a flame

• Combustion of hydrocarbons produce CO2 and H2O– Not enough oxygen available? CO formed– Severe lack of oxygen? Solid carbon (soot) formed

Page 14: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Oxidation vs. Combustion

• Conversion of glucose in the body happens at body temperature and without the production of a flame…this is oxidation rather than combustion.

C6H12O6 + 6O2 6CO2 + 6H2O

Page 15: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Sample Exercise 3.4Write the balanced equation for the reaction that occurs when methanol, CH3OH(l), is burned in air.

Page 16: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Formula Weights

• Sum of atomic weights of each atom in the chemical formula of a compound

• Example: H2SO4 has a formula weight of 98.1 amu

• Atomic weight (for atoms) and molecular weight (for molecular compounds)

Page 17: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Sample Exercise 3.5Calculate the formula weight of (a) sucrose, C12H22O11, and (b) calcium nitrate, Ca(NO3)2

Page 18: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Percentage Composition

• Percent by mass contributed by each element in the substance

Page 19: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Sample Exercise 3.6Calculate the percentage of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen in C12H22O11.

Page 20: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Avogadro’s Number & the Mole

6.022 x 1023

Indicates the number of particles (atoms, ions, or molecules) in a mole

FYI: mole comes from Latin and means “a mass”

molecule is the diminutive form of the word and means “a small mass”

Page 21: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Sample Exercise 3.7Without using a calculator, arrange the following samples in order of increasing numbers of carbon atoms: 12 g 12C, 1 mol C2H2, 9 x1023 molecules of CO2.

Page 22: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Molar Mass

• Mass in grams of one mole of a substance

• Units are g/mol

• Numerically equivalent to formula weight

Page 23: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Sample Exercise 3.9What is the mass in grams of 1.00 moles of glucose, C6H12O6?

Page 24: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Sample Exercise 3.10Calculate the number of moles of glucose, C6H12O6, in 5.30 g of C6H12O6.

Page 25: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Sample Exercise 3.11Calculate the mass, in grams, of 0.433 mol of calcium nitrate.

Page 26: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Converting between grams and atoms/molecules

Conversion factors:

1 mole = 6.022 x 1023 particles

1 mole = ________ grams

molar mass

Page 27: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Sample Exercise 3.12(a) How many glucose molecules are in 5.23 g of C6H12O6? (b) How many oxygen atoms are in this sample?

Page 28: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Empirical Formulas

• Gives the relative numbers of atoms of each element in a substance

• Based on experiments that give the # of moles of each element in a sample of the compound

• Empirical means based on observation & experiment

Page 29: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Finding Empirical FormulasMass % of elements

Grams of each

element

Moles of each

elementMole ratio*

assume 100 grams

use molar mass

divide by the smallest# of moles

multiply untilall #’s are

whole

Empirical formula

* Due to experimental errors, results may not lead to exact integers Ex. 1.99 2

Page 30: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Molecular Formulas

• Subscripts in a molecular formula are always a whole number multiple of the corresponding subscripts in the corresponding empirical formula

Whole # multiple = molecular weight

empirical formula weight

Page 31: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Sample Exercise 3.13Ascorbic acid (vitamin C) contains 40.92% C, 4.58% H, and 54.50% O by mass. What is the empirical formula of ascorbic acid?

Page 32: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Sample Exercise 3.14Mesitylene, a hydrocarbon that occurs in small amounts in crude oil, has an empirical formula of C3H4. The experimentally determined molecular weight of the substance is 121 amu. What is the molecular formula of mesitylene?

Page 33: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Sample Exercise 3.15Isopropyl alcohol, a substance sold as rubbing alcohol, is composed of C, H, and O. Combustion of 0.255 g of isopropyl alcohol produces 0.561 g of CO2 and 0.306 g of H2O. Determine the empirical formula of isopropyl alcohol.

Page 34: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Quantitative Information from Equations

• Coefficients indicate relative numbers of molecules involved in a reaction (also relative # of moles)

• Stoichiometrically equivalent to…use coefficients to make mole conversion factors between different substances involved in a reaction

Page 35: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Sample Exercise 3.16How many grams of water are produced in the oxidation of 1.00 g of glucose, C6H12O6?

Page 36: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Sample Exercise 3.17Solid lithium hydroxide is used in space vehicles to remove exhaled carbon dioxide. The lithium hydroxide reacts with gaseous carbon dioxide to form solid lithium carbonate and liquid water. How many grams of carbon dioxide can be absorbed by 1.00 gram of lithium hydroxide?

Page 37: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Limiting Reactants

Let’s make a sandwich!

2 Bd + Ch Bd2Ch10 slices 7 slices

can make5 sandwiches

can make7 sandwiches

In this reaction, bread is the limiting reactant and will becompletely used up.

Cheese is the excess reactant. We will have 2 slices of cheese left over once the reaction has completed.

Page 38: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Limiting Reactants

• Also called limiting reagents

• In a chemical reaction, the reaction stops when one reactant is totally used up. This is the limiting reactant.

Page 39: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Limiting Reactant Example

2H2(g) + O2(g) 2H2O(l)Initially we have 10 mol hydrogen gas and 7 moles oxygen gas. Which is limiting and how much excess remains unreacted?

Page 40: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Sample Exercise 3.18The most important commercial process for converting N2 from the air into nitrogen-containing compounds is based on the reaction of N2 and H2 to form ammonia (NH3):

N2(g) + 3H2(g) 2NH3(g)

How many moles of NH3 can be formed from 3.0 mol of N2 and 6.0 mol of H2?

Page 41: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Sample Exercise 3.19Consider the following reaction:

2 Na3PO4 (aq) + 3 Ba(NO3)2(aq) Ba3(PO4)2 (s) + NaNO3 (aq)

Suppose a solution containing 3.50 g of Na3PO4 is

mixed with a solution containing 6.40 g of Ba(NO3)2. How many grams of Ba3(PO4)2 can be formed?

Page 42: AP Chemistry Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Is the study of the quantities of substances consumed and produced in chemical reactions Derived from the Greek.

Sample Exercise 3.20Adipic acid, H2C6H8O4 , is used to produce nylon. The acid is made commercially by a controlled reaction between cyclohexane (C6H12) and O2:

2 C6H12 (l) + 5 O2(g) 2 H2C6H8O4 (l) + 2H2O (g)

(a) Assume that you carry out this reaction starting with 25.0 g of cyclohexane and that cyclohexane is the limiting reactant. What is the theoretical yield of adipic acid? (b) If you obtain 33.5 g of adipic acid from your reaction, what is the percent yield of adipic acid?


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