Unit 12 Mass and Moles.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
NOTES: Molar Volume, Density; and the Mole “Road Map”; NOTES: 10.3 Percent Composition.
Advertisements

Chapter 10: Chemical Quantities
Chemical Quantities, the Mole, and Conversions.  Measuring Matter -The amount of something is usually determined one of three ways; by counting, by mass,
1 Chapter 8 Chemical Quantities. 2 How you measure how much? How you measure how much? n You can measure mass, n or volume, n or you can count pieces.
The Mole – A measurement of matter
How you measure how much?
1 Chapter 6 “Chemical Quantities” Yes, you will need a calculator for this chapter!
The Mole and Quantifying Matter
Chapter 2Stoichiometry Stoichiometry: the science dealing with quantitative relationships involving the mass of substances and the number of particles.
X Chemistry Unit 8 The Mole Problem Solving involving Chemical Compounds.
The Mole: A Measurement of Matter
Chapter 7 Chemical Quantities or How do you measure how much? You can measure mass, volume, or you can count pieces of a substance. We measure mass in.
1 Chapter 12 Chemical Quantities. 2 How do you measure things? How do you measure things? n We measure mass in grams. n We measure volume in liters. n.
Chapter 4 “Chemical Quantities”
Section 7.1 The Mole: A Measurement of Matter
Chemical Quantities and The Mole
Chapter 10: Chemical Quantities
The Mole: A measurement of Matter
Chemical Quantities The Mole
The Mole Chapter 10. How do you measure? Often measure something by one of three different methods-  by counting  by mass  by volume.
Chapter 6 Chemical Quantities
Chapter 10 & 11 Chemical quantities and Chemical Reactions.
Chapter 11. Mole SI base unit for measuring the amount of substance The number of representative particles in exactly 12 grams of pure carbon-12 1 mole.
1 Chapter 10 “Chemical Quantities” Chemistry Pioneer High School Mr. David Norton.
1 Chapter 6 Chemical Quantities Powers of Ten Animation.
The Mole Chapter 11. Counting units 1mole = 6.02 x particles Particles Names Atoms, formula units (ionic compounds), molecules (covalent compounds)
Unit 5: The Mole.
Unit 6 Moles Conversions Formulas. Mole SI base unit for measuring the amount of substance The number of representative particles in exactly 12 grams.
Copyright©2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 1 Chemical Stoichiometry Stoichiometry - The study of quantities of materials consumed.
Chemical Quantities Chapter 10.
Chapter 7 Chemical Quantities Spring The Mole: A Measurement of Matter- What Is a Mole?  We use problem solving steps to figure out the amount.
1 Chemical Quantities or. 2 How can you measure how much? How can you measure how much? n You can measure mass, n or volume, n or you can count pieces.
Chemical Equations The Mathematics of Chemical Formulas.
Chemical Quantities Avogadro’s Number.
8 | 1 CHAPTER 8 CHEMICAL COMPOSITION. 8 | 2 Atomic Masses Balanced equations tell us the relative numbers of molecules of reactants and products. C +
1 Chapter 10 “Chemical Quantities” Yes, you will need a calculator for this chapter!
1 Chemical Quantities or. 2 How can you measure how much? How can you measure how much? n You can measure mass, n or volume, n or you can count pieces.
Chapter 7 Chemical Quantities Fall The Mole: A Measurement of Matter- What Is a Mole?  How do you measure matter?  You count things  You weigh.
THE MOLE Chapter 10: Chemical Quantities Measuring Matter What is a mole? It is the SI unit that measures the amount of substance.
Unit – The Mole Formula Mass – The total mass of the formula for a compound. - To calculate formula mass, multiply the number of atoms of each element.
Stoichiometry! The heart of chemistry. The Mole The mole is the SI unit chemists use to represent an amount of substance. 1 mole of any substance = 6.02.
The chemical formula for water is H 2 O. How many atoms of hydrogen and oxygen are there in one water molecule? H2OH2O 2 hydrogen atoms 1 oxygen atom.
1 Chapter 8 Chemical Composition 2 How you measure how much? How you measure how much? n You can measure mass, n or volume, n or you can count pieces.
The Mole & Chemical Quantities. The Mole Mole-the number of particles equal to the number of atoms in exactly 12.0 grams of carbon mol = 6.02 x.
CHEMICAL QUANTITIES Composition Stoichiometry Calculating Molar Mass Avogadro’s Number and the Mole Percentage Composition and Empirical Formulas Molecular.
Topic 3 The Mathematics of Formulas and Equations
Unit 4: Formula Stoichiometry. What is stoichiometry? Deals with the quantitative information in chemical formula or chemical reaction. Deals with the.
Chapter 10 – Chemical Quantities Jennie L. Borders.
UNIT 6: CHEMICAL QUANTITIES Chapter 10: Mole and Volume Relationships.
Chapter 7 Chemical Quantities or How you measure how much? You can measure mass, volume, or you can count pieces of a substance. We measure mass in grams.
6 How do we measure matter? Chemist can measure matter by counting, weight, mass or even volume…but one common “unit” that chemist use to measure matter.
MATHEMATICS In Chemistry?!. You thought you were done with sig figs??? 1.Leading zeros are never significant 2.Imbedded zeros are always significant 3.Trailing.
1 Unit 9. 2 How do we measure how much of something we have? How do we measure how much of something we have? n Mass (g) - how much stuff n Volume (L)
Unit 6: The Mole What is the MOLE? The Mole is a unit of measurement. ► Just as 1 dozen =12 ► x atoms = 1 mole ► Also called Avogadro’s Number.
1 Chapter 10 “Chemical Quantities” Yes, you will need a calculator for this chapter!
Chapter 10 “Chemical Quantities” Pequannock Township High School Chemistry Mrs. Munoz.
“Chemical Quantities” Yes, you will need a calculator for this chapter!
Chemical Quantities Chapter 10. The Mole: A Measurement of Matter We can measure mass (g), volume (L), count atoms or molecules in MOLES Pair: 1 pair.
Chapter 7 Moles. What is a Representative Particle The smallest unit into which a substance can be broken down without changing the composition of the.
Chapter 10 “Chemical Quantities” Y ou will need a calculator for this chapter!
Chemical Quantities Chapter 10. The Mole  a mole is an amount of matter  mass is also an amount of matter, however the mole is much more useful to chemists,
1 Chapter 10 “Chemical Quantities” Yes, you will need a calculator for this chapter!
AP CHEMISTRY NOTES Ch 3 Stoichiometry.
Chemical Quantities Part I
Chapter 10 “Chemical Quantities”
Chapter 10.1 The Mole: A Measurement of Matter
III. Formula Calculations
Chapter 10 – Chemical Quantities
C2H6 CH3 B. Empirical Formula
Unit 9 mathematics of chemistry
Presentation transcript:

Unit 12 Mass and Moles

Avogadro’s Hypothesis Under the same conditions of temperature and pressure, equal volumes of two different gases will have the same number of particles regardless of mass. At STP, this number of particles is Avogadro’s number or 6.02 x 1023 or 1 mole

*YOU MUST MEMORIZE THIS* This number can be used to express the mass, volume or number of particles for any gas sample. The conversion from one to another involves this equivalency: 1mole = 6.02 x 1023 particles = gram formula mass = 22.4 liters of space *YOU MUST MEMORIZE THIS*

Determining mass using formulas Atomic Mass Unit (amu) 1 amu = 1/12 the mass of a C-12 atom Gram Atomic Mass The mass of 1 mole of atoms Numerically equal to atomic mass number The unit used is (g) gram

Gram Molecular Mass The mass of 1 mole of molecules Found by adding up the atomic mass numbers of each element in the molecule The unit used is (g) grams

Gram Formula Mass The mass of 1 mole of an ionic substance *remember that ionic substances are not composed of molecules! Determine the gram formula mass/gram molecular mass of the following:

NaCl H2O 1 mole of H2 gas

Avogadro’s Number and Mole Map Problems What we know: At STP and in the gaseous phase: 1 mole = 6.02 x 1023 particles of a substance 1 mole takes up 22.4 L of space 1 mole has a mass equal to the gram formula/gram molecular mass

We could convert from moles to mass to volume using a Mole Map to set up a proportion Example: What is the mass of 3.01 x 1023 molecules of NH3(g) at STP?

What is the mass of 5 moles of O2 gas at STP?

How many molecules of NH3 would take up 44.8 L at STP?

What is the mass of 9.03 x 1023 atoms of neon gas at STP?

Density The mass per unit volume of a substance. The density of a substance DOES NOT change for that substance! Formula: Density = Mass/Volume

3 ways for the Regents to ask Density problems Table S: What is the density of one mole of N2?  Question will give 2 variables, you must use the formula to solve for the 3rd_: What is the density of a solid having a mass of 75g and a volume of 3 cm3?

Given the density, the Regents can ask for the molecular mass at STP: Remember that at STP, the molecular mass or 1 mole of a gas has what volume? 22.4L What is the gram molecular mass of a gas having a density of 2g/L at STP?

Percent Composition To determine the percentage by mass of a particular element in a compound. Determine the gfm Take the mass of individual element and divide by gfm Multiply by 100%

Examples What percent by mass of CaCO3 is made up of calcium? What is the percent by mass of nitrogen in NH4NO3 What is the percent by mass of water in copper sulfate pentahydrate?

Empirical Formula from Percent Composition Using the percent composition, one can determine the smallest whole number ratio of atom to atom in a compound (empirical formula). **Remember that since ionic substances do not have true molecules, they are always expressed in empirical formulas** Follow the steps: Divide the percent by the atomic mass Take the answer to step 1 and divide it by the smallest answer to step 1.

Examples What is the empirical formula of a compound containing 40% calcium, 12% carbon and 48% oxygen by mass?   What compound contains 56.58% potassium, 8.68% carbon and 34.73% oxygen by mass?

Special Rule if the answer to step 2 ends in .1 or .9 you can round off, BUT if it ends in .3 or .5, this is a significant portion of a number. You cannot round away this number, instead you must adjust all numbers accordingly by following the formula: If the number ends in .3 _multiply everything by 3____ If the number ends in .5 __multiply everything by 2___

Example Give the empirical formula of a compound containing 90.7% lead and 9.3% oxygen by mass.

Molecular Formula from Empirical Formula To determine the molecular formula from the empirical formula follow the steps: *Calculate the empirical mass. *Divide the mass of the compound by the mass of the empirical formula. *Multiply all subscripts by the answer in step 2.

Example A compound has a molecular mass of 42 amu and an empirical formula of CH2. What is the molecular formula?

Moles in Balanced Equations A chemical equation usually represents a chemical reaction. The equation will identify: The reactants and products The molar ratio of each of these. Phases of matter for each substance. Possibly some reference to energy changes in the reaction.

2H2(g) + O2(g) → 2H2O(l) + heat Example 2H2(g) + O2(g) → 2H2O(l) + heat

When using equations to solve conversion problems, one must remember the proportions the original substances are in. One can determine how many grams of a reactant are needed to produce a set volume by using the following rules:

Mass is the ONLY part of Avogadro’s hypothesis that CAN NOT be used directly in a proportion!! You must convert grams to moles–Table T Follow these steps: read and underline cross out what is not involved set up a proportion coefficients/known information cross multiply and divide

Example What volume of CO2(g) is produced when 15 liters of O2(g) are consumed in the reaction: C2H4(g) + 3 O2(g) → 2 CO2(g) + 2H2O(g)

Given the reaction: 2 C2H6(g) + 7 O2(g) → 4 CO2(g) + 6 H2O(g) What number of carbon dioxide molecules are produced when 6.02x1023 molecules of ethane are consumed?