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Chemical Quantities

Chemical Quantities. The Mole . But first…. CuCl 2 Na 3 PO 4 S 2 O 5 PbSO 4 ∙ 2H 2 O HNO 2 Silver acetate Gold (III) iodide Dinitrogen tetrabromide Cuprous nitrate tetrahydrate Hydrofluoric acid. Answers.

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Chemical Quantities

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  1. Chemical Quantities The Mole

  2. But first… • CuCl2 • Na3PO4 • S2O5 • PbSO4∙2H2O • HNO2 • Silver acetate • Gold (III) iodide • Dinitrogen tetrabromide • Cuprous nitrate tetrahydrate • Hydrofluoric acid

  3. Answers Pick out the mistake and write it down in your notes…do not say it out loud, or in a whisper, or in sign language, or in any way that would let someone else know the answer before they could figure it out on their own. • Copper (II) chloride or cupric chloride • Sodium phosphate • Dinitrogen pentoxide • Lead (II) sulfate dihydrate or plumbous sulfate dihydrate • Nitrous acid • Ag2C2H3O2 • AuI3 • N2Br4 • Cu(NO2)2 ∙ 4H2O • HF

  4. And second… The portfolio… Sections Notes—date each day, chronological order and not kept in a spiral notebook. HW—dated and put in chronological order Quests—see HW Tests—see HW General—everything that doesn’t have a home in the first set of sections goes here. Daily Journal…

  5. The Daily Journal • A statement of what was done that day. (We took notes over moles and Avogadro’s number). • ****A summary of your notes. Explain in detail in your own words what was covered in the notes for that day. Or explain what the purpose of the lab was, etc.**** • A couple statements about what you do not clearly understand or what you could not clearly describe in part #2 above. • What you are doing that night or what you have already done that night concerning this class.

  6. Ready?? Now we can begin with notes…

  7. Goals for Learning • To convert between moles and number of particles • To convert between mass and moles • To convert between moles and gas volume at STP • To use molarity in conversions involving solutions • To calculate the percent composition of a compound • To find an empirical formula from percent composition • To use an empirical formula to find a molecular formula

  8. Organization of Unit Volume of a solution Number of Moles Number of particles Mass Percent composition, empirical and molecular formulas Volume of a gas at STP

  9. Objectives • Explain what a mole is • Convert between moles and number of particles • Define molar mass • Find the molar mass of an element using the periodic table • Calculate the molar mass of a compound • Use molar mass to convert between mass and moles

  10. Key Terms • Mole (mol) • Avogadro’s number • Atomic mass • Molar mass

  11. Measuring Matter • All matter is made of different kinds of particles. • These particles can be molecules, atoms or ions. • Elements such as helium and iron exist as single atoms. • Other elements, like H, O and N are diatomic molecules. • Molecular compounds, like CO2 and water, also exist as molecules.

  12. Measuring Matter • Ionic compounds, like ammonium carbonate, consist of cations and anions in formula units. • Depending on the substance, different names for the particles are used. • In this unit, all atoms, molecules and formula units are referred to as particles.

  13. The Mole • The particles in matter are very, very small—too small to see, even with a microscope. • Counting the number of particles in a sample is not possible. • Instead of counting them, chemists measure the number of particles with a unit called the mole. • The abbreviation for mole is mol (I suppose there is a logical reason for this). • The mole is a unit for measuring the amount of substance.

  14. The Mole • The word mole means a number, similar to the word dozen. • 1 dozen eggs = 12 eggs • 1 mole eggs = 6.022 x 1023 eggs • One mole of any substance contains 6.022 x 1023 particles. • These particles can be atoms, molecules or formula units.

  15. The Mole • The number 6.022 x 1023 is called Avogadro’s number. • It is a very, very large number. • A mole of eggs is more eggs than have ever been eaten in the history of the world. • If you stacked a 6.022 x 1023 sheets of paper, the pile would reach to the sun and back more than a million times! • However a mole of molecules, atoms and formula units is not very big.

  16. Today… • Get ready for practice… • Notes to fill in the flow chart from Friday • Journals—in class—5 minutes before the bell—you must write the entire time…

  17. Time to Practice • NiCl2 • K3PO4 • S2Cl2 • H2CO3 • Cu(NO3)2 • Sodium hypochlorite • Silver bromide • Hydrochloric acid • Strontium permanganate • Sulfur trioxide

  18. Time to Practice • Nickel (II) chloride or nickelous chloride or #23 chloride • Potassium phosphate • Disulfur dichlorine • Hydrocarbonic acid • Copper (II) nitrate or Cupric nitrate • NaClO • AgBr • HCl • Sr(MnO4)2 • SO3

  19. Time to Recall • What is the date of Mole Day? • What time does it begin? End? • Write down the food you will be bringing in on Mole Day. • If you had a mole of bananas, how many bananas would you have? • What is this # called? (Name of dude?)

  20. Mole-Particle Conversions Volume of a solution Number of Moles Number of particles Mass Use Avogadro’s # of 1 mole = 6.022 X 1023 particles Percent composition, empirical and molecular formulas Volume of a gas at STP

  21. Mole-Particle Conversions • Chemists use Avogadro’s number to calculate the number of particles in a sample of matter. • Suppose you are told that balloon contains 2.00 mol of the gas argon–and nothing else. • You want to know how many particles are in the balloon. • You want to change the measurement units from moles to particles. • Moles Ar  particles Ar

  22. Mole-Particle Conversions • Your conversion factor is 1 mol Ar = 6.022 x 1023 particles Ar. • Write the given number and unit. Include the chemical symbol or formula of the substance. • Set up a factor label grid. • Use the conversion factor in the grid—making sure to align units so that they will cancel. • Give the answer with the correct unit and the correct number of significant digits.

  23. Mole-Particle Conversions • You try… • How many moles are in 4.35 x 1024 molecules of CO2? • How many formula units are in 3.15 mol of sodium oxide?

  24. Molar Mass • We know that 1 mole of a substance is a certain number of particles—regardless of what the particles are. • 1 mole of donuts is 6.022 x 1023 donuts • 1 mole of desks is 6.022 x 1023 desks • 1 mole of ¥ is 6.022 x 1023 ¥

  25. Molar Mass • 1 mole of a substance also has a certain mass—but it is different for every substance. • 1 mole of donuts does not have the same mass as 1 mole of desks, but they still contain the same number of each.

  26. Molar Mass • It is impossible to count the particles in a sample of matter but it is easy to find the sample’s mass. • If you know the mass of a substance, you can determine the number of moles in it. • To make a mass-to-mole conversion, you need to know about another piece of information from the periodic table. • Atomic number—number of protons and electrons in an atom • Atomic mass or molar mass is the mass of one atom of the substance or the mass of one mole of the substance.

  27. Molar Mass • If you want to know the atomic mass (mass of one atom) the number has units of amu (atomic mass units). • If you want to know the molar mass (mass of one mole of atoms) the number has units of g/mol (grams of substance per mole of substance).

  28. The Molar Mass of Elements • The molar mass of carbon is 12 g/mol. • The molar mass of oxygen is 16 g/mol. • This means that 6.022 x 1023 atoms of carbon (1 mol) has a mass of 12g. • This also means that 6.022 x 1023 atoms of oxygen (1 mol) has a mass of 16g.

  29. Review Mini • What is a dozen? • What is a mole? • How many atoms of H are in a dozen of H? • How many atoms of H are in a mole of H? • What is the mass of one H atom? • What is the mass of 1 mole of H atoms? • What is the mass of 1 O atom? • What is the mass of 1 mole of O atoms? • What is the mass of 1 mole of H2O?

  30. Today… • Short review time… • Get boards • Notes—molar mass, mass to mole conversions, gas volume to mole conversions, solution volume to mole conversions, percent composition and empirical formula concept… • HW—review 1 and 2 due tomorrow

  31. Review time… • CaI2 • NaNO3 • FeCl3 • SO2 • CoF2∙3H2O • Lithium nitride • Aluminum hydroxide • Carbon tetrabromide • Cupric nitrite • Magnesium acetate dihydrate

  32. Review time… • What number represents a mole? • How many moles of He is 6.35 x 1026 particles of He? • When you see that magnesium has a mass number of 24.31; what are the units we will be dealing with?

  33. Answers • Calcium iodide • Sodium nitrate • Iron (III) chloride or ferric chloride • Sulfur dioxide • Cobalt (II) fluoride trihydrate • Li3N • Al(OH)3 • CBr4 • Cu(NO2)2 • Mg(C2H3O2)2∙2H2O

  34. Answers • 6.022 x 1023 • 1050 moles • grams / mole

  35. The Molar Mass of Compounds • To find the molar mass of a compound of two or more elements, add the masses of 1 mol of each atom in the compound's formula or formula unit. • For example, to find the molar mass of CO2, count the number of C and O atoms in the formula.

  36. The Molar Mass of Compounds • Then locate the molar mass of carbon and oxygen on the periodic table. • Add the molar masses of each carbon an oxygen that make up the formula. • CO2 1 C and 2 O  C = 12.01g/mol, O = 16.0g/mol, O = 16.0g/mol = 44.01 g/mol • CO2  1C(12.01g/mol) + 2O(16.0g/mol) = 44.01 g/mol

  37. The Molar Mass of Compounds • You try… • Calculate the molar mass of the ionic compound, Ba(C2H3O2)2. • Calculate the molar mass of ammonium sulfate.

  38. Mole-Mass Conversions Volume of a solution Use molar mass in g/mol Number of Moles Number of particles Mass Percent composition, empirical and molecular formulas Volume of a gas at STP

  39. Mole-Mass Conversions • Molar mass can be used to convert between the mass of a sample and the number of moles in that sample. • If you know a sample’s mass, you can find the number of moles in the sample. • If you know how many moles are in a sample, you can find its mass. • Write the given number and unit as well as the formula for the substance.

  40. Mole-Mass Conversions • Set up a factor label grid. • Set up the conversion factor of grams per mole or moles per gram depending on your initial given information. • Use the atomic molar mass if converting atoms or use the molecular molar mass if converting compounds. • Write the answer with the correct units and the correct number of significant digits.

  41. Mole-Mass Conversions • Example: • What is the molar mass of carbon dioxide? • How many molecules are in 1 dozen carbon monoxide? • How many molecules are in 1 mole of carbon dioxide? • How many moles are in 26.52g of CO2? • What is the mass in grams of 3.25 mol of NaBr?

  42. Mini Quiz • How many grams are in 1.00 mole of calcium phosphate? • How many grams are in 3.20 moles of calcium phosphate? • How many molecules are in 4.12 moles of calcium phosphate? • How many molecules are in 298.58g of calcium phosphate? • How many grams in 3.24 x 1025 molecules of calcium phosphate? • What is the molarity of a solution that has 153.6g of Ca(NO3)2 in 1.2L of total solution? • How many liters does 402g of O2 gas take up at STP?

  43. Objectives • Define STP and standard molar volume • Convert between gas volume, moles, mass and number of particles • Calculate the molarity of a solution • Calculate the mass of solute • Calculate the volume of a solution

  44. Key Terms • Atmosphere • Standard temperature and pressure (STP) • Standard molar volume • Concentrated • Dilute • Concentration • Molarity

  45. Molar Volume Volume of a solution Number of Moles Number of particles Mass Percent composition, empirical and molecular formulas Use 1 mole of a gas at STP takes up 22.4L of space Volume of a gas at STP

  46. Molar Volume • Gases have a property that liquids and solids do not have. • Under certain conditions, 1 mol of any gas has a volume of 22.4L. • The two conditions that make this true are… • A temperature of 0ºC • A pressure of 1 atmosphere (atm)

  47. Molar Volume • Atmosphere (atm) is a unit for pressure. • The air pressure at sea level is a bout 1 atm. • The two conditions previously mentioned are standard temperature and pressure (STP). • For now it is important to know that 1 mol of any gas at STP has a volume of 22.4L. • This value is called standard molar volume.

  48. Molar Volume • For gases at STP, standard molar volume, 22.4L/mol, is used to convert between gas volume and moles. • This is a conversion factor that we can use in our factor label grid. • IMPORTANT: This conversion factor only works at STP!

  49. Molar Volume • Example: • What is the volume of 1.50 mol of CO2 @ STP? • You try… • How many moles are in 75.3L of O2 at STP?

  50. Molarity Conversions Volume of a solution Use molarity (M) in moles / L Number of Moles Number of particles Mass Percent composition, empirical and molecular formulas Volume of a gas at STP

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