Stoichiometry Review.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
TIER 6 Combine the knowledge of gases and solutions to perform stoichiometric calculations.
Advertisements

Chapter 9 Stoichiometry.
Stoichiometry.
Limiting Reactants & Percent Yield
Stoichiometry Review.
Stoichiometry.
Chapter 9 Chemical Quantities Chemistry B2A Formula and Molecule Ionic & covalent compounds  Formulaformula of NaCl Covalent compounds  Molecule molecule.
Chapter 9 – Review Stoichiometry
Chapter 9.
Stoich with Gases!. How do we figure out how many particles there are in a gas sample?
Lecture 109/21/05. Mass reactant Stoichiometric factor Moles reactant Moles product Mass product Stoichiometric Calculations.
Ch. 9: Calculations from Chemical Equations
Stoichiopardy Holy Moley Do the 2 or 3 step Random Limit my Percent Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Chempardy.
Stoichiometry II. Solve stoichiometric problems involving moles, mass, and volume, given a balanced chemical reaction. Include: heat of reaction Additional.
Conversion Factors Molar mass Molar mass atomic mass in g = 1 mole atomic mass in g = 1 mole Volume of gas at STP Volume of gas at STP 1 mole gas = 22.4L.
Chapter 12 Review “Stoichiometry”
Test Review Chemical Reactions and Stoichiometry.
Stoichiometry Ch. 9. The Arithmetic of Equations 9-1.
MOL Concept Warmups. 1. The gram-formula mass of a compound is 48 grams. The mass of 1.0 mole of this compound is – A. 1.0 g B. 4.8 g C. 48 g D. 480 g.
The Mole & Stoichiometry!
Stoichiometry Chemical Quantities Chapter 9. What is stoichiometry? stoichiometry- method of determining the amounts of reactants needed to create a certain.
8.1 Reacts with 3 mol of O2 Produces 1 mol of Al2O3
Stoichiometry Warmup I have 1 mole of CO 2 gas at STP. How many grams of CO 2 do I have? How many Liters of CO 2 do I have? How many molecules of CO 2.
Limiting Reactants, Theoretical Yield, and % Yield.
Problem 3.14 How many moles of cobalt (Co) atoms are there in 6.00 X109 (6 billion) Co atoms?
Ch. 9-3 Limiting Reactants & Percent Yield. POINT > Define limiting reactant POINT > Identify which reactant is limiting in a reaction POINT > Define.
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,
THIS IS With Host... Your VocabularyMole to mole Limiting Reactants Mass to mass Mass to Mole Percent Yield.
Stoichiometry. Stoichiometry Stoichiometry – the process of using a balanced chemical equation to calculate the relative amounts of reactants and products.
Let’s talk… mole to mole
Chapter 12 Stoichiometry 12.3 Limiting Reagent and Percent Yield
Solving a Stoichiometry Problem
Stoichiometry.
Stoichiometry The calculation of quantities in chemical equations.
Calculations from Chemical Equations
Stoichiometry II.
Stoichiometry Chapter 3
Chapter 12 Stoichiometry 12.1 The Arithmetic of Equations
Percentage Atom Economy
MASS - MASS STOICHIOMETRY
Stoichiometry CaCO3 a CaO + CO2
- gives numbers of moles reacting
Chemistry Spring Midterm Review
Ch. 9: Calculations from Chemical Equations
Chapter 12 Review.
Chapter 12 Review.
Limiting and Excess Reactants
Stoichiometry CaCO3 a CaO + CO2
Chapter 12 Stoichiometry 12.1 The Arithmetic of Equations
Chapter 11 Stoichiometry
Unit 4: Chemical Equations and Stoichiometry
Quantities In Chemical Reactions
Ch. 11: Molecular Composition of Gases
Chapter 12 Stoichiometry 12.2 Chemical Calculations
Unit 4: Chemical Equations and Stoichiometry
Honors Chem Unit 12 Stoich Notes
Stoichiometry Review.
and cooking with chemicals
Chapter 12 Stoichiometry 12.1 The Arithmetic of Equations
Stoichiometry.
Test Review Answers.
Chem 111 Ch 9 Notes 9.1 Stoichiometry- calculation of quantities in chemical reactions From the coefficients in a BALANCED equation you can get: N2+3H2
Stoichiometry.
Preview Multiple Choice Short Answer Extended Response
Warm-up 50 grams of H2O 100 grams of CaCO3 150 grams of NaOH
Stoichiometry.
Chapter 12 Stoichiometry
Stoichiometry Chapter 9.
Clicker #1 How many cars can we make? A) 3 B) 4 C) 6 D) 12 E) 16.
Presentation transcript:

Stoichiometry Review

Question 1. Balance the following equation and choose the quantity which is the sum of the coefficients of the products. ____ SnS2 + ____ HCl          ___ H2SnCl6 + ____ H2S a)   8 b)   5 c)   3 d)   6 e)   7

Question 1. Balance the following equation and choose the quantity which is the sum of the coefficients of the products. ____ SnS2 + ____ HCl          ___ H2SnCl6 + ____ H2S a)   8 b)   5 c)   3 d)   6 e)   7 1 6 1 2

Question 2. Balance the following equation. What is the sum of the coefficients of the reactants and products? ____ CoO + ____ O2 ____ Co2O3 a)   9 b)   3 c)   7 d)   6 e)   8

Question 2. Balance the following equation. What is the sum of the coefficients of the reactants and products? ____ CoO + ____ O2 ____ Co2O3 a)   9 b)   3 c)   7 d)   6 e)   8 4 1 2

Question 3. Balance the following equation for the combustion of octane. What is the sum of the coefficients of the reactants and products? ____ C8H18 + ____ O2 ____ CO2 + ____ H2O a)   30 b)   61 c)   52 d)   43 e)   39

Question 3. Balance the following equation for the combustion of octane. What is the sum of the coefficients of the reactants and products? ____ C8H18 + ____ O2 ____ CO2 + ____ H2O a)   30 b)   61 c)   52 d)   43 e)   39 2 25 16 18

Question 4. Calculate the number of moles of N2 produced from 0.080 moles of NH3 by the following reaction. 4 NH3 + 6 NO 5 N2 + 6 H2O a)   0.02 b)   0.50 c)   0.08 d)   0.10 e)   0.64

a) 0.02 b) 0.50 c) 0.08 d) 0.10 e) 0.64 0.080 mol NH3 x 5 moles N2 Question 4. Calculate the number of moles of N2 produced from 0.080 moles of NH3 by the following reaction. 4 NH3 + 6 NO 5 N2 + 6 H2O a)   0.02 b)   0.50 c)   0.08 d)   0.10 e)   0.64 ? mol 0.080 mol 0.080 mol NH3 x 5 moles N2 4 moles NH3

Question 5. Phosgene was used in WW1 as a war gas. It reacts with water in the lungs to produce HCl which causes severe lung damage and ultimately leads to death. How many grams of HCl are produced when 11.0 g of CO2 are simultaneously formed? (C = 12.01, O = 16.00, H = 1.008, Cl = 35.45). COCl2 + H2O 2 HCl + CO2 a)   27.3 b)   36.4 c)   9.11 d)   18.2 e)   0.25

Question 5. Phosgene was used in WW1 as a war gas. It reacts with water in the lungs to produce HCl which causes severe lung damage and ultimately leads to death. How many grams of HCl are produced when 11.0 g of CO2 are simultaneously formed? (C = 12.01, O = 16.00, H = 1.008, Cl = 35.45). COCl2 + H2O 2 HCl + CO2 a)   27.3 b)   36.4 c)   9.11 d)   18.2 e)   0.25 11.0 g CO2 x 1 mol CO2 x 2 mol HCl x 36.458 g 44.01 g 1 mol CO2 1 mol

Question 6. Calculate the number of moles of Na2CS3 produced from 0.6 moles of CS2 by the following reaction. 3 CS2 + 6 NaOH 2 Na2CS3 + Na2CO3 + 3 H2O a)   0.2 b)   0.4 c)   0.8 d)   0.6 e)   0.9

a) 0.2 b) 0.4 c) 0.8 d) 0.6 e) 0.9 0.6 mol CS2 x 2 moles N2 Question 6. Calculate the number of moles of Na2CS3 produced from 0.6 moles of CS2 by the following reaction. 3 CS2 + 6 NaOH 2 Na2CS3 + Na2CO3 + 3 H2O a)   0.2 b)   0.4 c)   0.8 d)   0.6 e)   0.9 0.6 mol CS2 x 2 moles N2 3 moles NH3

Question 7. A sample of lime, CaO, weighing 69 g was prepared by heating 131 g of limestone, CaCO3. What was the percent yield of the reaction? (Atomic weights: Ca = 40.08, C = 12.01, O = 16.00). CaCO3 CaO + CO2 a)   97 b)   73 c)   85 d)   94 e)   91

Question 7. A sample of lime, CaO, weighing 69 g was prepared by heating 131 g of limestone, CaCO3. What was the percent yield of the reaction? (Atomic weights: Ca = 40.08, C = 12.01, O = 16.00). CaCO3 CaO + CO2 a)   97 b)   73 c)   85 d)   94 e)   91 131 g CaCO3 x 1 mol CaCO3 x 1 mol CaO x 56.08 g 100.09 g 1 mol CaCO3 1 mol = 73.4 g Theoretical yield % yield =69 g /73.4 g x 100

Question 8. 100. mL of hydrogen gas at STP would contain how many moles? a)   0.00446 b)   0.050 c)   0.446 d)   4.46 e)   224

100. mL of hydrogen gas at STP would contain how many moles? Question 8. 100. mL of hydrogen gas at STP would contain how many moles? a)   0.00446 b)   0.050 c)   0.446 d)   4.46 e)   224 100. mL x 1 L x 1 mol 1000 mL 22.4 L

What is the energy released when 4.60 g if NO2 is produced? Question 9. For the reaction: N2H4 + 3 O2 2 H2O + NO2 + 400 kJ What is the energy released when 4.60 g if NO2 is produced? a)   40.0 kJ b)   18.0 kJ c)   120.0 kJ d)   160.0 kJ

What is the energy released when 4.60 g if NO2 is produced? Question 9. For the reaction: N2H4 + 3 O2 2 H2O + NO2 + 400 kJ What is the energy released when 4.60 g if NO2 is produced? a)   40.0 kJ b)   18.0 kJ c)   120.0 kJ d)   160.0 kJ 4.60 g NO2 x 1 mol NO2 x 400 kJ 46.0 g 1 mol NO2

Question 10. What is the mass of a sample of C3H8 gas of it occupies 100. mL at STP? a)   0.196 b)   0.509 c)   5.09 d)   19.6 e)   196

Question 10. What is the mass of a sample of C3H8 gas of it occupies 100. mL at STP? a)   0.196 b)   0.509 c)   5.09 d)   19.6 e)   196 100. mL x 1 L x 1 mol x 44.0 g 1000 mL 22.4 L 1 mol