Limiting Reactant & Percent Yield

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Stoichiometry (Yay!).
Advertisements

II. Stoichiometry in the Real World (p ) Stoichiometry – Ch. 9.
Stoichiometry Ratios The stoichiometric coefficients in a balanced chemical reaction can be used to determine the mole relationships between any combination.
Limiting Reactants & Percent Yield
Chapter 9 - Section 3 Suggested Reading: Pages
HONORS CHEMISTRY Feb 27, Brain Teaser Cu + 2 AgNO 3  2 Ag + Cu(NO 3 ) 2 – How many moles of silver are produced when 25 grams of silver nitrate.
CHEMISTRY February 13, 2012.
Stoichiometry Chemistry Ms. Piela.
Limiting/Excess Reactants and Percent Yield
Section Limiting Reagent and Percent Yield
Limiting Reactant and Percent Yield Limiting Reagent u If you are given one dozen loaves of bread, a gallon of mustard and three pieces of salami, how.
Chapter 9 – Review Stoichiometry
Chapter 9.
“Stoichiometry” Original slides by Stephen L. Cotton Mr. Mole.
Review: Mole Conversions: Convert 3 mols Oxygen to grams: Convert 42 grams Chlorine to mols: What is % composition? What is the %comp of magnesium in magnesium.
P ERCENT Y IELD. OBJECTIVE I can calculate percent yield of a reaction.
April 7, 2014 Today: Stoichiometry and % Yield. Percent Yield Remember, stoichiometry is used to tell you how much product you can form from X amount.
Stoichiometry mass and amount relationships between reactants and products in a chemical reaction.
Limiting Reactants and Percent Yield
STOICHIOMETRY Chapter 9 Stoichiometry Mole-Mole Mass-Mole Mass-Mass
Chapter 12 Stoichiometry. 1. The part of chemistry that deals with the amount of substances involved in chemical reactions A. 3 basic steps to every stoichiometry.
Calculate the mass of Cu produced? Mass of beaker and Cu – mass of beaker.
Stoichiometry: A calculation based on a balanced equation. Granada Hills Charter High School.
Stoichiometry A chemical equation shows the reactants (left side) and products (right side) in a chemical reaction. A balanced equation shows, in terms.
Limiting reagents In lab a reaction is rarely carried out with exactly the required amounts of each reactant. In lab a reaction is rarely carried out with.
Chapter 12 Chemical Quantities 12.2 Using Moles. Warm-up: Making a Sandwich How Many Sandwiches?
Chapter 9, section 3, part 2 Percent Yield. Why percent yield?  Usually, not all the product possible is actually formed.  theoretical yield  maximum.
Limiting Reactants & Percent Yield. Definitions  Limiting Reactant - completely consumed in the reaction and determines the amount of product formed.
Chemistry in Life  You have a future job working for Consumer Reports  Testing advertising claims  An antacid company claims  Neutralizes ten times.
 How far away you are from a theoretical or “actual” value.
Stoichiometry. What is stoichiometry? Involves the mass relationships between reactants and products in a chemical reaction ▫Based on the law of conservation.
Section 9.3 Limiting Reactants and Percent Yield 1.Define the terms theoretical yield and actual yield. 2.Calculate percent yield 3.Identify reasons that.
TOPIC 17: INTRO TO STOICHIOMETRY EQ: EQ: How does a balanced chemical equation help you predict the number of moles and masses of reactants and products?
Unit 6: Limiting Reactants and Percent Yield Chapter 11.3 and 11.4.
Stoichiometry. Stoichiometry Stoichiometry – the process of using a balanced chemical equation to calculate the relative amounts of reactants and products.
Stoichiometry Pronounced: Stoy-kee-AHM-uh-tree. What is stoichiometry? Its math that helps us to see the relationship between what is used and formed.
Let’s look at the butane reaction once more: 2C 4 H O 2 → 8CO H 2 O What do the coefficients represent? Stoichiometry is the use of these.
“Stoichiometry” Original slides by Stephen L. Cotton and modified by Roth, Prasad and Coglon Mr. Mole.
The study of quantities of substances in chemical reactions
Stoichiometry The calculation of quantities in chemical equations.
Chemistry: Chapter 11 Note Packet
Chapter 12 Review.
Percent Yield.
Limiting and Excess Reactants
“Stoichiometry” Mr. Mole.
Limiting reactants and percent yield
Stoichiometry in the Real World
HONORS CHEMISTRY Feb 27, 2012.
Theoretical Yield.
Reaction Yield.
Chapter 12 “Stoichiometry”
Chapter 9 Chemical quantities.
Stoichiometry.
Chapter 11 “Stoichiometry”
Stoichiometry Unit 4 (Ch 9).
Reaction Stoichiometry
Chapter 12 Stoichiometry.
Stoichiometry mass and amount relationships between reactants and products in a chemical reaction.
Limiting reactants and percent yield
Warm-Up What happens if you don’t have enough of one of your reactants?
Chapter 12 “Stoichiometry”
II. Stoichiometry in the Real World
Unit 5 “Stoichiometry” Mr. Mole.
Stoichiometry Greek for “measuring elements”
Limiting Reactants If the amounts of two reactants are given, the reactant used up first determines the amount of product formed. 22.
Stoichiometry The mathematics of chemical equations.
Stoichiometry.
Limiting Reagent If you are given one dozen loaves of bread, a gallon of mustard and three pieces of salami, how many salami sandwiches can you make? The.
Calcium carbonate, found in limestone and marble, reacts with hydrochloric acid to form calcium chloride, carbon dioxide and water. What mass of CO2 could.
Presentation transcript:

Limiting Reactant & Percent Yield Section 12-3 Limiting Reactant & Percent Yield

Limiting Reactant A limiting reactant is the reactant that limits the amount of product that may be produced. The quantities of product are always determined or controlled by the limiting reactant. The reactant that produces the least amount of product through a stoichiometry problem (mass-mass, mass-volume, volume-volume) is the limiting reactant.

Limiting Reactant Let’s use a sandwich analogy 2 bread + 1 meat  1 sandwich How many sandwiches can we make with 2 bread and 4 meat?

Limiting Reactant Identify the limiting reactant when 1.7g of sodium reacts with 2.6L of chlorine gas at STP to produce sodium chloride. Identify the limiting reactant when 10.0g of water reacts with 4.5g of sodium to produce sodium hydroxide and hydrogen gas.

Limiting Reactant How can we determine we are dealing with a limiting reactant problem? 1) It asks for the limiting reactant. 2) There are two given amounts of reactants.

Limiting Reactant How do we know we ARE NOT dealing with a limiting reactant problem? 1) In the word problem there is only one given amount. 2) The tell you the reaction runs to COMPLETION 3) They tell you there is one reactant in EXCESS.

Percent Yield Remember, Percent yield is where it’s A/T % Yield = actual yield (A)/theoretical yield (T) x 100 %=A/T x 100 Actual yield is what you get in the lab Theoretical yield is what we get in out mathematical stoichiometry problem.