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Stoichiometry Devon Bateman. Essential Question Why is a foot…a foot? –King Henry I had a foot 12 inches long.

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Presentation on theme: "Stoichiometry Devon Bateman. Essential Question Why is a foot…a foot? –King Henry I had a foot 12 inches long."— Presentation transcript:

1 Stoichiometry Devon Bateman

2 Essential Question Why is a foot…a foot? –King Henry I had a foot 12 inches long.

3 Unit Questions What are measurements? What do we measure? How do we measure? Why do we measure? How do chemists measure molecules?

4 Overview Measurement –List examples of measurement –Define purpose of measurement –Explain chemist’s use of the mole Stoichiometry –Relate stoichiometry to a recipe –Demonstrate mole ratios in balanced equations

5 WHAT DO WE MEASURE AND HOW?

6 Measurements allow us compare or analyze data. Therefore, measurements must be reasonable.

7 How do chemists count molecules? Can chemists count by measuring? Chemists count using the mole.

8 Mole: the unit used to measure the amount of a substance 1 mole = 6.02x10 23 particles

9 Stoichiometry- the study of mole and mass relationships in a chemical reactionStoichiometry- http://www.lsua.us/chem1001/stoichiometry/stoichiometry.html

10 The mass of the reactants must equal the mass of the products. H 2 + Cl 2  2 HCl

11 A balanced chemical equation is very similar to a recipe.

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13 Coefficients represent the mole ratio between substances. 6 O 2 + C 6 H 12 O 6  6 CO 2 + 6 H 2 O

14 Example 4 Fe + 3 O 2  2 Fe 2 O 3 It takes 4 moles iron & 3 moles oxygen to produce 2 moles iron (III) oxide.

15 Conclusion The mole allows chemists to analyze chemical reactions. Balanced equations can be treated like recipes. Amount of ingredients determines the amount of product


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