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Stoichiometry

Date post: 03-Jan-2016
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Stoichiometry. Mole Map. Mass Mountain. Mole Island. Particle Peninsula. Using the Mole Map with Chemical Equations. We can convert between Moles, Particles and Grams, but… This only gives us information about one substance! - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Stoichiometry

Stoichiometry

Page 2: Stoichiometry

Mole Map

Mole Island

Particle Peninsula

Mass Mountain

Page 3: Stoichiometry

Using the Mole Map with Chemical Equations

• We can convert between Moles, Particles and Grams, but…

• This only gives us information about one substance!

• How do we determine how much reactants to use in a chemical reaction? Or how much product we will create?

STOICHIOMETRY

Page 4: Stoichiometry

Proportional Relationships

I have 5 eggs. How many cookies can I make?

3/4 c. brown sugar1 tsp vanilla extract2 eggs2 c. chocolate chipsMakes 5 dozen cookies.

2 1/4 c. flour1 tsp. baking soda1 tsp. salt1 c. butter3/4 c. sugar

5 eggs 5 doz.

2 eggs= 12.5 dozen cookies

Ratio of eggs to cookies

Courtesy Christy Johannesson www.nisd.net/communicationsarts/pages/chem

150 cookies

Page 5: Stoichiometry

Mole Ratio

• A conversion factor that converts moles of one compound in a balanced chemical equation into moles of another compound.

2 H2 + O2 2 H2O

• Coefficients tell how many particles (or MOLES of particles) of each chemical is needed in the reaction.

Page 6: Stoichiometry

Mole Ratios

How many moles of water will be formed if I react 14.0 moles of oxygen with excess H2?

2 H2 + O2 2 H2O

14.0 moles O2 x 2 moles H2O = 28.0 moles H2O 1 mole O2

MOLE RATIOFrom the balanced equation.

Coefficients tell moles of each substance.

Page 7: Stoichiometry

Mole Island

Stoichiometry Sea Known UnknownSubstance A Substance B

Mass Mountain

Particle Peninsula

Mole Island

Mass Mountain

Particle Peninsula

Mole RatioRaft

Page 8: Stoichiometry

1 mole = 6.022 x 10 23 particles

(atoms or molecules)

Mass

Particles

Mole Mole

Mass

Particles

Known

Substance A1 mole = molar mass (g)

Use coefficientsfrom balanced

chemical equation

1 mole =

6.022 x

1023 partic

les

(atoms o

r molecu

les)

1 mole =

molar m

ass (g

)

Unknown

Substance B

Page 9: Stoichiometry

Stoichiometry Steps1. Write a balanced equation.2. Identify known & unknown.3. Line up conversion factors.

– Mole ratio - moles moles– Molar mass - moles grams

Core step in all stoichiometry problems!!

– Mole ratio - moles moles

4. Check answer.

Courtesy Christy Johannesson www.nisd.net/communicationsarts/pages/chem

Page 10: Stoichiometry

How many moles of KClO3 must decompose in order to produce 9 moles of oxygen gas?

2KClO3 2KCl + 3O2 ? mol 9 mol

Courtesy Christy Johannesson www.nisd.net/communicationsarts/pages/chem

O2 KClO3

x mol KClO3 = 9 mol O2 = 6 mol KClO3

2 mol KClO3

3 mol O26 mol

Page 11: Stoichiometry

Stoichiometry

2 TiO2 + 4 Cl2 + 3 C CO2 + 2 CO + 2 TiCl4

4.55 molx mol

C Cl2

x mol Cl2 = 4.55 mol C3 mol C

= 6.07 mol Cl24 mol Cl2

C TiO2

x molecules TiCl4 = 115 g TiO2 80 g TiO2

= 8.66x1023 molecules TiCl4

1 mol TiO2 2 mol TiCl42 mol TiO2

6.02x1023 molecules TiCl41 mol TiCl4

x g TiO2 = 4.55 mol C3 mol C

= 243 g TiO2

2 mol TiO2 80 g TiO2

1 mol TiO2

How many moles of chlorine will react with 4.55 moles of carbon?

How many grams of titanium (IV) oxide will react with 4.55 moles of carbon?

x g

How many molecules of TiCl4 will react with 115 g TiO2?

TiO2 TiCl4

x molecules115 g


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