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1 The Mole 6.02 X 10 23 Chemistry I HD – Chapter 6 Chemistry I – Chapter 10 ICP - Handouts SAVE PAPER AND INK!!! When you print out the notes on PowerPoint,

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Presentation on theme: "1 The Mole 6.02 X 10 23 Chemistry I HD – Chapter 6 Chemistry I – Chapter 10 ICP - Handouts SAVE PAPER AND INK!!! When you print out the notes on PowerPoint,"— Presentation transcript:

1 1 The Mole 6.02 X 10 23 Chemistry I HD – Chapter 6 Chemistry I – Chapter 10 ICP - Handouts SAVE PAPER AND INK!!! When you print out the notes on PowerPoint, print "Handouts" instead of "Slides" in the print setup. Also, turn off the backgrounds (Tools>Options>Print>UNcheck "Background Printing")!

2 2 STOICHIOMETRYSTOICHIOMETRY - the study of the quantitative aspects of chemical reactions.

3 3 Just How Big is a Mole? Enough soft drink cans to cover the surface of the earth to a depth of over 200 miles. If you had Avogadro's number of unpopped popcorn kernels, and spread them across the United States of America, the country would be covered in popcorn to a depth of over 9 miles. If we were able to count atoms at the rate of 10 million per second, it would take about 2 billion years to count the atoms in one mole.

4 4 Everybody Has Avogadro’s Number! But Where Did it Come From? It was NOT just picked! It was MEASURED. One of the better methods of measuring this number was the Millikan Oil Drop Experiment Since then we have found even better ways of measuring using x- ray technology Click me!

5 5 Other Names Related to Molar Mass Molecular Mass/Molecular Weight: If you have a single molecule, mass is measured in amu’s instead of grams. But, the molecular mass/weight is the same numerical value as 1 mole of molecules. Only the units are different. (This is the beauty of Avogadro’s Number!) Formula Mass/Formula Weight: Same goes for compounds. But again, the numerical value is the same. Only the units are different. THE POINT: You may hear all of these terms which mean the SAME NUMBER… just different units

6 6 Mole to Mole conversions 2Al 2 O 3  Al + 3O 2 –each time we use 2 moles of Al 2 O 3 we will also make 3 moles of O 2 2 moles Al 2 O 3 3 mole O 2 or 2 moles Al 2 O 3 3 mole O 2 These are the two possible conversion factors to use in the solution of the problem.

7 7 Mole to Mole conversions How many moles of O 2 are produced when 3.34 moles of Al 2 O 3 decompose? 2Al 2 O 3  Al + 3O 2 3.34 mol Al 2 O 3 2 mol Al 2 O 3 3 mol O 2 = 5.01 mol O 2 If you know the amount of ANY chemical in the reaction, you can find the amount of ALL the other chemicals! Conversion factor from balanced equation

8 8 Practice: 2C 2 H 2 + 5 O 2  4CO 2 + 2 H 2 O If 3.84 moles of C 2 H 2 are burned, how many moles of O 2 are needed? (9.6 mol) How many moles of C 2 H 2 are needed to produce 8.95 mole of H 2 O? (8.95 mol) If 2.47 moles of C 2 H 2 are burned, how many moles of CO 2 are formed? (4.94 mol)

9 9 Steps to Calculate Stoichiometric Problems 1. Correctly balance the equation. 2. Convert the given amount into moles. 3. Set up mole ratios. 4. Use mole ratios to calculate moles of desired chemical. 5. Convert moles back into final unit.

10 10 Mass-Mass Problem: 6.50 grams of aluminum reacts with an excess of oxygen. How many grams of aluminum oxide are formed? 4Al + 3O 2  2Al 2 O 3 = 6.50 g Al ? g Al 2 O 3 1 mol Al 26.98 g Al 4 mol Al 2 mol Al 2 O 3 1 mol Al 2 O 3 101.96 g Al 2 O 3 (6.50 x 1 x 2 x 101.96) ÷ (26.98 x 4 x 1) = 12.3 g Al 2 O 3 are formed

11 11 Another example: If 10.1 g of Fe are added to a solution of Copper (II) Sulfate, how many grams of solid copper would form? 2Fe + 3CuSO 4  Fe 2 (SO 4 ) 3 + 3Cu Answer = 17.2 g Cu

12 12 Volume-Volume Calculations: How many liters of CH 4 at STP are required to completely react with 17.5 L of O 2 ? CH 4 + 2O 2  CO 2 + 2H 2 O 17.5 L O 2 22.4 L O2O2 1 mol O2O2 2 O2O2 1 CH 4 1 mol CH 4 22.4 L CH 4 = 8.75 L CH 4 22.4 L O 2 1 mol O 2 1 mol CH 4 22.4 L CH 4 Notice anything relating these two steps?

13 13 Avogadro told us: Equal volumes of gas, at the same temperature and pressure contain the same number of particles. Moles are numbers of particles You can treat reactions as if they happen liters at a time, as long as you keep the temperature and pressure the same. 1 mole = 22.4 L @ STP

14 14 Shortcut for Volume-Volume? How many liters of CH 4 at STP are required to completely react with 17.5 L of O 2 ? CH 4 + 2O 2  CO 2 + 2H 2 O 17.5 L O2O2 2 L O 2 1 L CH 4 = 8.75 L CH 4 Note: This only works for Volume-Volume problems.

15 15 Conversion YOU MUST BE ABLE TO CONVERT BETWEEN ALL OF THESE –Mass  mass, moles  volume, volume  moles, mass  volume, volume  mass, etc. –Don’t let it scare you! You MUST use stoichiometry to do it correct though. (Trust me…I did an entire scientific study on it to graduate with my master’s)

16 16 Conversions? C 6 H 12 O 6 + 6 O 2  6 CO 2 + 6H 2 O 856 g of sugar reacts with oxygen to produce how many liters of CO 2 ? 21 L of O 2 will produce how many moles of water?


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