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Chapter 4 Stoichiometry

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1 Chapter 4 Stoichiometry
Chemical Reactions Chapter 4 Stoichiometry

2 Chemical Equations 4 Al (s) + 3 O2 (g)  2 Al2O3 (s)
A chemical reaction shows the formulas and relative amounts of reactants and products in a reaction. 4 Al (s) O2 (g)  2 Al2O3 (s) reactants product stoichiometric coefficients physical state s, l, g or aq

3 Chemical Equations 4 Al (s) + 3 O2 (g)  2 Al2O3 (s)
Interpret this equation as 4 atoms solid Al react with 3 molecules gaseous O2 to form 2 formula units of solid Al2O3 4 moles solid Al react with 3 moles gaseous O2 to form 2 moles of solid Al2O3

4 Balancing Chemical Equations
“Matter is conserved in chemical change” Antoine Lavoisier, 1789 An equation must be balanced: It must have the same number of atoms of each kind on both sides

5 The rules of the game Write the correct formulas of the reactants and products Do not change the formulas to balance the equation Put a coefficient in front of each formula so that the same number of atoms of each kind appear in both the reactants and products The coefficent multiplies through its formula 2 H2O shows 4 H atoms and 2 O atoms

6 Combustion Reactions In combustion, a hydrocarbon or C–H–O fuel combines with O2 to form CO2 and H2O __ CH4 + __ O2  __ CO2 + __ H2O 1 CH O2  1 CO H2O Balanced equation shows 1 C, 4 H, and 4 O on each side If N or S are in the formula for the fuel, assume it is oxidized to NO2 or SO2

7 Example 4-1 Write a balanced equation for the complete combustion of ethylene, C2H4. Write and balanced equation for the complete combustion of thiophene, C4H4S

8 Example 4-2 Write a balanced equation for the complete combustion of glycerol, C3H8O3 Write a balanced equation for the complete combustion of thiosalicylic acid, C7H6O2S

9 Stoichiometry Stoichiometry is chemical accounting
The heart of stoichiometry is the mole ratio given by the coefficients of the balanced equation

10 Stoichiometry Stoichiometry is chemical accounting
The heart of stoichiometry is the mole ratio given by the coefficients of the balanced equation moles A mole ratio moles B moles A moles B

11 Example 4-3A How many moles of O2 are produced form the decomposition of 1.76 mol potassium chlorate: 2 KClO3 (s)  2 KCl (s) + 3 O2 (g)

12 Example 4-3B How many moles of Ag are produced in the decomposition of 1.00 kg of silver (I) oxide: 2 Ag2O (s)  4 Ag (s) + O2 (g)

13 Example 4-4A How many grams of magnesium nitride are produced when 3.82 g Mg react with excess N2: 3 Mg (s) + N2 (g)  Mg3N2 (s)

14 Example 4-4B How many grams of H2 (g) are needed to produce 1.00 kg of CH3OH: CO (g) H2 (g)  CH3OH (l)

15 Example 4-5A How many grams of H2 are consumed per gram of O2 in the reaction 2 H2 (g) + O2 (g)  2 H2O (l)

16 Example 4-5B How many grams of O2 are consumed per gram of octane (C8H18) in the combustion of octane?

17 2 Al (s) + 6 HCl (aq)  2 AlCl3 (aq) + 3 H2 (g)
Example 4-6A The model problem describes an Al-Cu alloy composed of 93.7% Al and 6.3% Cu by mass, with a density of 2.85 g/cm3. The Al (but not the Cu) reacts with HCl: 2 Al (s) HCl (aq)  2 AlCl3 (aq) H2 (g) What volume of the Al-Cu alloy must be dissolved in HCl to produce 1.00 g H2?

18 2 Al (s) + 6 HCl (aq)  2 AlCl3 (aq) + 3 H2 (g)
Example 4-6B The model problem describes an Al-Cu alloy composed of 93.7% Al and 6.3% Cu by mass, with a density of 2.85 g/cm3. The Al (but not the Cu) reacts with HCl: 2 Al (s) HCl (aq)  2 AlCl3 (aq) H2 (g) How many grams of Cu are present in a sample of alloy that yields 1.31 g H2 when it reacts with HCl?

19 Example 4-7A The model problem describes an HCl solution which is 28% HCl by mass and has a density of 1.14 g/mL. It reacts with Al: Al (s) HCl (aq)  2 AlCl3 (aq) H2 (g) How many mg of H2 are produced when 1 drop (0.05 mL) of the HCl solution reacts with Al?

20 Example 4-7B A vinegar contains 4.0% HC2H3O2 by mass and has a density of 1.01 g/mL. It reacts with sodium hydrogen carbonate: HC2H3O2 (aq) + NaHCO3 (s)  NaC2H3O2 (aq) + H2O (l) + CO2 (g) How many grams of CO2 are produced by the reaction of 5.00 mL of this vinegar with NaHCO3?

21 Chemical Reactions in Solution
Most reactions occur in aqueous solution SOLUTE is the substance to be dissolved in solution SOLVENT is the substance (often a liquid) the solute dissolves in The concentration of the solution is Molarity (M) = moles solute L solution

22 Example 4-8A If 22.3 g acetone, (CH3)2CO, are dissolved in enough water to make 1.25 L of solution, what is the concentration (M) of the solution?

23 Example 4-8B 15.0 mL of concentrated acetic acid, HC2H3O2 (d = g/mL), are dissolved in enough water to produce mL of solution. What is the concentration of the solution?

24 Example 4-9A At 25 °C, an aqueous solution saturated with NaNO3 is 10.8 M NaNO3. How many grams of NaNO3 are present in 125 mL of this solution?

25 Example 4-9B How many grams of Na2SO4 • 10 H2O are needed to prepare 355 mL of M Na2SO4?

26 Dilution problems It is common to prepare a solution by diluting a more concentrated solution (the stock solution). The moles of solute taken from the stock solution are given by moles solute = volume x molarity All the solute taken from the stock appears in the diluted solution, so moles solute are constant: VstockMstock = VdiluteMdilute

27 Example 4-10A 15.00 mL of M K2CrO4 solution are diluted to mL. What is the concentration of the dilute solution?

28 Example 4-10B After being left out in an open beaker, 275 mL of M NaCl has evaporated to only 237 mL. What is the concentration of the solution after evaporation?

29 Stoichiometry in Solution
Stoichiometry in solution is just the same as for mass problems, except the conversion into or out of moles uses molarity instead of molar mass: grams A mL A moles A moles B grams B mL B mole ratio

30 Example 4-11A K2CrO4 (aq) + 2 AgNO3 (aq)  Ag2CrO4 (s) + 2 KNO3 (aq) How many mL of M K2CrO4 must react with excess AgNO3 to produce 1.50 g Ag2CrO4?

31 Example 4-11B K2CrO4 (aq) + 2 AgNO3 (aq)  Ag2CrO4 (s) + 2 KNO3 (aq) How many mL of M AgNO3 must react with excess K2CrO4 to produce exactly 1.00 g Ag2CrO4?

32 Limiting reactant In a given reaction, often there is not enough of one reactant to use up the other reactant completely The reactant in short supply LIMITS the quantity of product that can be formed

33

34 Goldilocks Chemistry Imagine reacting different amounts of Zn with mol HCl: Zn (s) HCl (aq)  ZnCl2 (aq) + H2 (g) Rxn 1 Rxn 2 Rxn 3 Mass Zn g g g Moles Zn mol mol mol Moles HCl mol mol mol Ratio mol HCl mol Zn

35 Limiting reactant problems
The easiest way to do these is to do two stoichiometry calculations Find the amount of product possible from each reactant The smaller answer is the amount of product you can actually make (you just ran out of one reactant) The reactant on which that answer was based is the limiting reactant

36 Example 4-12A How many grams of PCl3 form when 215 g P4 react with 725 g Cl2: P4 (s) Cl2 (g)  4 PCl3 (l)

37 Example 4-12B How many kg of POCl3 form if 1.00 kg of each reactant are allowed to react: PCl3 (l) + 6 Cl2 (g) + P4O10 (s)  10 POCl3 (l)

38 Example 4-13A When 215 g P4 react with 725 g Cl2
P4 (s) Cl2 (g)  4 PCl3 (l) (example 4-12A) which reactant is in excess and what mass of that reactant remains after the reaction is finished?

39 Example 4-13B 12.2 g H2 and 154 g O2 are allowed to react. Identify the limiting reactant, which gas remains after the reaction, and what mass of it is left over. 2 H2 (g) + O2 (g)  2 H2O (l)

40 Percent Yield In real experiments we often do not get the amount of product we calculate we should, because the reactants may participate in other reactions (side reactions) that produce other products (by-products) The reaction often does not go to completion. Percent yield tells the ratio of actual to theoretical amount formed.

41 Percent Yield Suppose you calculate that a reaction will produce 50.0 g of product. This is the theoretical yield. The reaction actually produces only 45.0 g of product . This is the actual yield. Percent yield = g (actual) x 100 = 90.0% g (theoretical)

42 Example 4-14A If 25.7 g CH2O is produced per mole CH3OH that reacts, what are the theoretical, actual, and percent yield: CH3OH (g)  CH2O (g) + H2 (g)

43 Example 4-14B What is the percent yield if 25.0 g P4 reacts with 91.5 g Cl2 to produce 104 g PCl3: P4 (s) Cl2 (g)  4 PCl3 (l)

44 Example 4-15A If the observed percent yield for the formation of urea is 87.5%, what mass of CO2 must react with excess NH3 to produce 50.0 g CO(NH2)2: NH3 (g) + CO2 (g)  CO(NH2)2 (s) + H2O (l)

45 Example 4-15B What mass of C6H11OH should you start with to produce 45.0 g C6H10 if the reaction has 86.2% yield and the C6H11OH is 92.3% pure: C6H11OH (l)  C6H H2O (l)

46 Exercise 26 Balance these equations by inspection
(NH4)2Cr2O7 (s)  Cr2O3 (s) + N2 (g) + H2O (g) NO2 (g) + H2O (l)  HNO3 (aq) + NO (g) H2S (g) + SO2 (g)  S (g) + H2O (g) SO2Cl2 + HI  H2S + H2O + HCl + I2

47 Exercise 30 Write balanced equations for these reactions:
Sulfur dioxide gas with oxygen gas to produce sulfur trioxide gas Solid calcium carbonate with water and dissolved carbon dioxide to produce aqueous calcium hydrogen carbonate Ammonia gas and nitrogen monoxide gas to produce nitrogen gas and water vapor

48 Exercise 32 3 Fe (s) + 4 H2O (g)  Fe3O4 (s) + H2 (g)
How many moles of H2 can be produced from 42.7 g Fe and excess steam? How many grams of H2O are consumed in the conversion of 63.5 g Fe to Fe3O4? If 7.36 mol H2 are produced, how many grams of Fe3O4 must also be produced?

49 Exercise 36 Silver oxide decomposes above 300 °C to yield metallic silver and oxygen gas g impure silver oxide yields g O2. Assuming there is no other source of O2, what is the % Ag2O by mass in the original sample?

50 Exercise 42 How many grams of CO2 are produced in the complete combustion of 406 g of a bottled gas that consists of 72.7% C3H8 (propane) and 27.3% C4H10 (butane), by mass?

51 Exercise 45 What are the molarities of these solutes?
150.0 g sucrose (C12H22O11) in mL aqueous solution 98.3 mg of 97.9% pure urea, CO(NH2)2, in 5.00 mL aqueous solution mL methanol (CH3OH, density = g/mL) in 15.0 L aqueous solution

52 Exercise 52 After 25.0 mL of aqueous HCl solution is diluted to mL, the concentration of the diluted solution is found to be M HCl. What was the concentration of the original HCl solution?

53 Exercise 56 Ca(OH)2 (s) + 2 HCl (aq)  CaCl2 (aq) + 2 H2O (l)
How many grams of Ca(OH)2 will react completely with 415 mL of M HCl? How many kilograms of Ca(OH)2 will react with 324 L of an HCl solution that is 24.28% HCl by mass, density = 1.12 g/mL?

54 Exercise 63 g oxalic acid, H2C2O4, is exactly neutralized by mL of a NaOH solution. What is the concentration of the NaOH solution? H2C2O NaOH  Na2C2O H2O

55 Exercise 70 Chlorine can be generated by heating calcium hypochlorite and hydrochloric acid to form chlorine gas, calcium chloride, and water. If 50.0 g Ca(OCl)2 and 275 mL 6.00 M HCl react, how many grams of Cl2 gas form? Which reactant is left over, and how much (in grams)?

56 Exercise 72 2 C6H5NO2 + 4 C6H14O4  (C6H5N)2 + 4 C6H12O4 + 4 H2O nitrobenzene triethylene azobenzene glycol If 0.10 L nitrobenzene (d = 1.20 g/mL) react with 0.30 L triethylene glycol (d = 1.12 g/mL) to form 55 g azobenzene, find Theoretical yield Actual yield Percent yield


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