Section 3: Limiting Reactants

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
LIMITING REACTANT The reactant that gives the least number of product moles “limits” the reaction. To understand this concept, let’s suppose you were an.
Advertisements

Chapter 11: Stoichiometry
Reaction Stoichiometry Chapter 9. Reaction Stoichiometry Reaction stoichiometry – calculations of amounts of reactants and products of a chemical reaction.
Chapter 12 Stoichiometry.
Stoichiometry Chapter 12.
Limiting Reagent What happens in a chemical reaction, if there is an insufficient amount of one reactant?
Limiting Reactants. A chemical reaction will stop when you run out of one of your ____________ ____________– limits the extent of the reaction.  Determines.
Stoichiometry-the study of the ____________ relationships between the amounts of __________ used and the amounts of __________ formed during a __________.
Section 11.1 Defining Stoichiometry
USING EQUATIONS  Nearly everything we use is manufactured from chemicals. › Soaps, shampoos, conditioners, cd’s, cosmetics, medications, and clothes.
Limiting Reactants Very rare that reactants are present in the same ratio that they are used in the rxn. This means one reactant will run out first. This.
Limiting Reactants and Percent Yields
Limiting Reactants and Excess
 CHEM.B Apply the mole concept to representative particles (e.g., counting, determining mass of atoms, ions, molecules, and/or formula units). 
Limiting Reactants & Percent Yield
Limiting reagent, Excess reactant, Theoretical or Percent yield
P ERCENT Y IELD. OBJECTIVE I can calculate percent yield of a reaction.
Percent Yield.
Daily Science feb How many grams of CH4 is needed to produce 50.0 g CHCl3? CH4 + 3Cl2  CHCl3 +3HCl Lithium reacts spontaneously with bromine to produce.
S TOICHIOMETRY Ch. 12 Page 352. W HAT IS “ STOICHIOMETRY ”? A way of figuring out how much of a product can be made from a given amount of reactant Based.
CHEMISTRY Matter and Change
Stoichiometry. Information Given by the Chemical Equation  The coefficients in the balanced chemical equation show the molecules and mole ratio of the.
Chapter Menu Stoichiometry Section 11.1Section 11.1Defining Stoichiometry Section 11.2Section 11.2 Stoichiometric Calculations Section 11.3Section 11.3.
Ch. 11: Stoichiometry Sec. 11.4: Percent Yield.
Stoichiometry-the study of the ____________ relationships between the amounts of __________ used and the amounts of __________ formed during a __________.
Chapter12 Stoichiometry. I. What is Stoichiometry? The study of quantitative relationships between amounts of reactants used and products formed by a.
Continuing Stoichiometry…. The idea.  In every chemical reaction, there is one reactant that will be run out (called the limiting reactant).  This will.
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.
I. I.Stoichiometric Calculations Topic 6 Stoichiometry Topic 6 Stoichiometry.
Stoichiometry Ch. 12 Page 352. What is “stoichiometry”?  A way of figuring out how much of a product can be made from a given amount of reactant  Based.
Limiting Reagent and Percent Yield Chapter 12.3 Page 368.
Why do I care??? Balanced equations give exact mole ratios When the reactions are carried out, the reactants are usually not available in those same.
Products Percent Yield. Theoretical Yield Maximum amount of product Calculation Balanced Equation Given mass Molar Mass Mole Ratios.
CHEMISTRY Matter and Change
Reaction Yield. Theoretical vs Actual Yield Theoretical yield is the maximum amount of product that can be produced from a given amount of reactant Calculated.
Percent Yield. Percent yield describes the efficiency of a chemical reaction 100 free throws Theoretically… Actually…
NIS – CHEMISTRY Lecture 65 Percent Yield Ozgur Unal 1.
A chemical reaction stops when one of the reactants is used up. Section 3: Limiting Reactants K What I Know W What I Want to Find Out L What I Learned.
Stoichiometry Chapter 9 Percent Yield Stoich ppt _5 Percent Yield.
Percent yield is a measure of the efficiency of a chemical reaction. Section 4: Percent Yield K What I Know W What I Want to Find Out L What I Learned.
1 Chapter 11 Stoichiometry Objectives Perform Mole-Mole Calculations Perform Calculations involving mass, gas volume or particles Identify the Limiting.
Chapter 12 Stoichiometry. Stoichiometry Topics Conservation of mass and the balanced chemical equation Mole ratios in a chemical equation Stoichiometric.
Ch. 9-3 Limiting Reactants & Percent Yield. POINT > Define limiting reactant POINT > Identify which reactant is limiting in a reaction POINT > Define.
Stoichiometry – Ch What would be produced if two pieces of bread and a slice of salami reacted together? + ?
LIMITING REAGENT. Recipe for Chocolate Cake: 2 c flour 1 c sugar 2 eggs 1 c oil ½ c cocoa X 3 6 c flour 3 c sugar 6 eggs 3 c oil 1½ c cocoa.
Stoichiometry Notes. Stoichiometry branch of chemistry that deals with the mass relationships of elements in compounds and the mass relationships between.
Stoichiometry Chapter 9 Limiting Reagents Stoich ppt _5 Limiting Reagents Practice.
1 1)Write correct chemical formulas, know types of reactions and write a balanced equation!!! 2)a) Convert g, L or # or particles to mole and b) use mole.
Stoichiometry Chapter 11.
Stoichiometry Chemistry – Chapter 12.
Limiting Reagent What happens in a chemical reaction, if there is an insufficient amount of one reactant?
Stoichiometry Chemistry – Chapter 12.
Lecture 63 – Lecture 64 Limiting Reactants Ozgur Unal
UNIT 11 STOICHIOMETRY Stoichiometry is the study of quantitative relationships between the amounts of reactants used and amounts of products formed by.
How much can I make? Maximizing Chemical Quantities
9.5 – NOTES Limiting Reactants and Percent Yield
Unit 8: Stoichiometry: Part 1
Stoichiometry.
Section 1: Defining Stoichiometry
11.3 Limiting Reactants Discovery School Ashley Lardizábal
Click a hyperlink or folder tab to view the corresponding slides.
Section 11.3 Limiting Reactants
Reaction Yield.
Reaction Stoichiometry
Stoichiometry Notes.
Reaction Yield.
Stoichiometry Notes.
Bellwork Tuesday 5.9 L of carbon dioxide is combined with 8.4 g MgO in a synthesis reaction to form magnesium carbonate. How many grams of magnesium carbonate.
Chapter 11: Stoichiometry
Stoichiometry Chapter 12.
Presentation transcript:

Section 3: Limiting Reactants Stoichiometry

Learning Goals: Identify the limiting reactant in a chemical equation. Identify the excess reactant, and calculate the amount remaining after the reaction is complete. Calculate the mass of a product when the amounts of more than one reactant are given.

Why Do Reactions Stop? Reactions proceed until one of the reactants is used up and one is left in excess. The limiting reactant limits the extent of the reaction and, thereby, determines the amount of product formed. The excess reactants are all the leftover unused reactants.

Why Do Reactions Stop? Determining the limiting reactant is important because the amount of the product formed depends on this reactant.

Calculating Products Ex.) S8(l) + 4Cl2(g) → 4S2Cl2(l) If 200.0g of sulfur reacts with 100.0g of chlorine, what mass of disulfur dichloride is produced?

Calculating Products Determine moles of reactants

Calculating Products Determine whether the two reactants are in the correct mole ratio, as given in the balanced chemical equation. Only 1.808 mol of chlorine is available for every 1 mol sulfur, instead of the 4mol of chlorine required by the balanced chemical equation, thus chlorine is the limiting reactant.

Calculating Products Calculate the amount of product formed.

Calculating Products Now that you have determined the limiting reactant and the amount of product formed, what about the excess reactant, sulfur? How much of it reacted? You need to make a mole-to-mass calculation to determine the mass of sulfur needed to react completely with 1.410 mol of chlorine.

Calculating Products Next, obtain the mass of sulfur needed:

Calculating Products Knowing that 200.0g of sulfur is available and only 90.42g is needed, you can calculate the amount of sulfur left unreacted when the reaction ends.

Calculating Products Using an excess reactant can speed up the reaction. Using an excess reactant can drive a reaction to completion.

Practice The reaction between solid white phosphorus (P4) and oxygen produces solid tetraphosphorus decoxide. Determine the mass of P4O10 formed if 25.0 g of P4 and 50.0 g of oxygen are combined. How much of the excess reactant remains after the reaction stops?

Section 4: Percent Yield Stoichiometry

Learning Goals Calculate the theoretical yield of a chemical reaction from data. Determine the percent yield for a chemical reaction.

How Much Product? Laboratory reactions do not always produce the calculated amount of products. Reactants stick to containers. Competing reactions form other products.

How Much Product?

How Much Product? The theoretical yield is the maximum amount of product that can be produced from a given amount of reactant. The actual yield is the amount of product actually produced when the chemical reaction is carried out in an experiment.

How Much Product? The percent yield of a product is the ratio of the actual yield expressed as a percent.

Practice Solid silver chromate (Ag2CrO4) forms when potassium chromate is added to a solution containing 0.500g of silver nitrate. Determine the theoretical yield of silver chromate. Calculate the percent yield if the reaction produces 0.455 g of silver chromate.