PERCENT YIELD Unit 8 Lesson 2.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
II. Stoichiometry in the Real World (p ) Stoichiometry – Ch. 9.
Advertisements

Limiting Reagent What happens in a chemical reaction, if there is an insufficient amount of one reactant?
Stoichiometry, Limiting Reactants and Percent Yield
Mathematics of Chemical Equations By using “mole to mole” conversions and balanced equations, we can calculate the exact amounts of substances that will.
Limiting Reactants. Reactants  Products Limiting Reactant: Determines the amount of products that can be made Excess Reactant : Left over reactants.
Limiting Reactants and Percent Yields
Limiting Reactants and Excess
Percent Yields from Reactions
P ERCENT Y IELD. OBJECTIVE I can calculate percent yield of a reaction.
Unit 8: Percent Yield Calculations
*Notice, kind of like the opposite of Percent Error.
STOICHIOMETRY Calculations Based on Chemical Equations.
Percentage Yield.
Stoichiometry and the Math of Equations Part 4: Percent Yield 1.
Stoichiometry Kelley Kuhn CCA. What the heck is stoichiometry? Stoichiometry is what we use in chemistry to solve problems. For example, you can use stoichiometry.
STAAR Ladder to Success Rung 8. How do chemists define a mole? Example #1: A sample consists of 6.85 x atoms of carbon. How many moles does the.
Ch. 11: Stoichiometry Sec. 11.4: Percent Yield.
C. Johannesson II. Stoichiometry in the Real World (p ) Stoichiometry – Ch. 9.
II. Limiting Reactants Stoichiometry – 3.7. A. Limiting Reactants b Available Ingredients 4 slices of bread 1 jar of peanut butter 1/2 jar of jelly b.
II. Stoichiometry in the Real World Stoichiometry – Ch. 11.
Percentage Yield and Energy Lesson 3. Sometimes reactions do not go to completion. Reaction can have yields from 1% to 100%. 1.How many grams of Fe are.
Ch. 9 Notes – Chemical Quantities
Stoichiometry: A calculation based on a balanced equation. Granada Hills Charter High School.
Limiting Reactants and Excess What is the Limiting Reagent (Reactant)? It is the substance in a chemical reaction that runs out first. The limiting reactant.
PERCENT YIELD. Percent Yield Percent yield is the ratio of actual yield of an experiment to theoretical yield. To find percent yield, you divide the actual.
Chapter 9, section 3, part 2 Percent Yield. Why percent yield?  Usually, not all the product possible is actually formed.  theoretical yield  maximum.
Percent Yield. “yield—” the amount of product actually made through a chemical reaction. Why is this value important? Theoretical yield— calculated amount.
Video 9-1 Reaction Stoichiometry Steps for Problem Solving.
Percentage Yield.
WARM UP 1.Given the following reaction…… Ba(NO 3 ) 2(aq) + Na 2 CO 3(aq)  BaCO 3(s) + 2 NaNO 3(aq) Calculate the yield of sodium nitrate when you start.
SOL Review 6 Stoichiometry. Consider: 4NH 3 + 5O 2  6H 2 O + 4NO Many conversion factors exist: 4 NH 3 6 H 2 04NO 5O 2 (and others) 5 O 2 4 NO4 NH 3.
Challenge Problem When nitrogen and hydrogen react, they form ammonia gas, which has the formula NH 3. If 56.0 g of nitrogen are used up in the reaction,
Friday March 27 Objective: Determine the limiting reactant in a chemical reaction. Determine how much product can be made. Checkpoint: Given the equation:
Limiting Reagent What happens in a chemical reaction, if there is an insufficient amount of one reactant?
Stoichiometry and the Mole
Percent Yield.
Sec 12.3 limiting reactant, percent, actual and theoretical Yield
II. Stoichiometry in the Real World (p )
Combustion Analysis A g sample composed of C, H, N is burned to produce g CO2 and g H2O Assume all C in the sample is converted to CO2.
Grades for your reaction
Percent Yield.
II. Stoichiometry in the Real World
MASS - MASS STOICHIOMETRY
11-3: Limiting Reactants and Percent Yield
Combustion Analysis A g sample composed of C, H, N is burned to produce g CO2 and g H2O Assume all C in the sample is converted to CO2.
Ch. 9: Calculations from Chemical Equations
Chapter 12 Review.
Percentage Yield and Energy Lesson 3.
HONORS CHEMISTRY Feb 27, 2012.
% yield = (actual yield / theoretical yield) x 100%
Stoichiometry Vocab Theoretical Yield: the calculated amount of product yielded by a reaction (found through stoichiometry) Actual Yield: the actual amount.
Mathematics of Chemical Equations
What percent is 8 of 20? If a reaction made 50. g of product, but was supposed to produce 75. g, what was the percent produced? 8 20 x 100 = 40% 50.
Calculations Based on Chemical Equations
Ch. 9 Notes -- Stoichiometry
*Notice, kind of like the opposite of Percent Error.
Percent Yield.
II. Stoichiometry in the Real World (p )
Lecture 4.5 – Percent Yield
How many moles of water are made by
Percent Yield Unit 8 Lesson 3.
Percent Yield A batting average is a measure of how often a batter gets a hit as a percentage of how many times he tries. In chemistry, the percent yield.
Percent Yield Unit 8 Lesson 3.
Chemical Calculations
Limiting Reactants and Percent Yield
STOICHIOMETRY REVIEW.
Stoichiometry.
Percent Yield Unit 7 Lesson 3.
Limiting/Excess Reactants and Percent Yield
Limiting Reactants (Reagents)
Presentation transcript:

PERCENT YIELD Unit 8 Lesson 2

Percent Yield experimental yield % Yield = x 100 theoretical yield In a laboratory setting, it is rare to produce as much product as you theoretically should. Theoretical Yield - amount of product that should be obtained as predicted by stoichiometry (calculated) Experimental Yield - amount of product actually obtained in an experiment (often smaller but sometimes bigger) Percent yield is the opposite of percent error. Percent error is how far off the right answer you were. Percent yield is how much product you got. This is the opposite of percent error. Percent error is how far off the right answer you were. Percent yield is how much product you got. experimental yield % Yield = x 100 theoretical yield

Sample Problem Determine the percent yield for the reaction if you calculated that 1.025 g Al(OH)3 could be produced but only 0.966 g Al(OH)3 is actually recovered during the experiment.

Sample Problem You react 9.85 grams of CH4 with an unlimited supply of oxygen and make 14.5 grams of water. What was your percent yield? Calculate Theoretical Yield CH4 + O2 → H2O + CO2 Balance! CH4 + 2O2 → 2H2O + CO2

Continued Theoretical = 22.1 g H2O Experimental = 14.5 g H2O 65.6%