230 likes | 374 Views
Stoichiometry. Or… the cheeseburger problem. Cheeseburger Recipe. 1 hamburger bun 2 hamburger patties 2 slices of cheese 4 strips of bacon. Chemical Recipe. 2Na + Cl 2 2NaCl H 2 SO 4 + 2NaOH Na 2 SO 4 + 2H 2 O. How this all relates….
E N D
Stoichiometry Or… the cheeseburger problem
Cheeseburger Recipe • 1 hamburger bun • 2 hamburger patties • 2 slices of cheese • 4 strips of bacon
Chemical Recipe • 2Na + Cl2 2NaCl • H2SO4 + 2NaOH Na2SO4 + 2H2O
How this all relates… • Coefficients in chemical equations represent number of molecules, not mass of molecules
How this all relates… • But, we don’t want to COUNT molecules for our chemical reactions • Counting is done by weighing!!
How this all relates… • But, with different atomic masses, how can we compare the compounds? • Must use MOLES!!
A Question… • If 12.5 g of C4H10 are burned in air, how many grams of carbon dioxide is formed?
Step 1 • Write a BALANCED equation for the reaction! • It is no good if the equation is not balanced!
Step 2 • Convert the known mass of the reactant of product (can work either direction!) to moles of that substance
Step 3 • Use the balanced equation to set up appropriate mole ratios
Step 4 • Use appropriate mole ratios to calculate the number of moles of reactant or product
Step 5 • Convert from moles back to grams if required by the problem
Another Problem • AgNO3 + KBr AgBr + KNO3 • 64.18 g of silver bromide formed from how much silver nitrate?
Remember the steps… • Balanced chem eqn? • Mass to moles? • Mole ratios? • Moles to grams?
We had assumed… • That there was always enough of the other chemical for the reaction to complete itself.
However… • This is not always the case! • In the following reaction: • 2H2(g) + O2(g) 2H2O(g)
We need… • 2 moles H2 to react with 1 mole O2 to form 2 moles of H2O
We have… • Only 4.0 moles H2 and 1.0 moles O2 • We can only form 2.0 moles of H2O • 2 moles H2 INXS!!
A Limiting Reactant • 17.82 g sodium hydroxide reacts with 15.40 g phosphoric acid to give sodium phosphate and water. • Which reaction is limiting? • How much sodium phosphate is formed?
Mg(s) + I2(s) MgI2(s) • Identify the limiting reagent • 100 atoms Mg and 100 molecules of I2 • 150 atoms Mg and 100 molecules of I2 • 200 atoms Mg and 300 molecules of I2 • 0.16 mol Mg and 0.25 mol I2 • 0.14 mol Mg and 0.14 mol I2 • 0.12 mol Mg and 0.08 mol I2 • 1.00 g Mg and 2.00 g I2
AgNO3 + KBr AgBr + KNO3 • 64.81 g of AgNO3 and 92.67g KBr • 1. Which reactant is limiting? Which INXS? • 2. How much silver bromide is formed? • 3. How much of the excess reactant is left over? • 4. If the actual yield of silver bromide is 54.77g, what is the percent yield?