12.3 Limiting Reagent and Percent Yield

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Stoichiometry Chapter 12.
Advertisements

Stoichiometric Calculations
Chapter 9: Stoichiometry
Limiting Reactant The coefficients in a balanced chemical reaction are a set ratio of products to products and products to reactants Much like a recipe.
HONORS CHEMISTRY Feb 27, Brain Teaser Cu + 2 AgNO 3  2 Ag + Cu(NO 3 ) 2 – How many moles of silver are produced when 25 grams of silver nitrate.
Chapter 9 Combining Reactions and Mole Calculations.
Stoichiometry Chemistry Chapter 12
Section “Limiting” Reagent
Stoichiometry 12.3 Limiting Reagent and Percent Yield Chapter 12
Chapter 3.  Reactants are left of the arrow  Products are right of the arrow  The symbol  is placed above the arrow to indicate that the rxn is being.
Limiting Reactants and Percent Yields
Limiting Reactants & Percent Yield
Limiting Reagent and Percent Yield
Chapter 12 Stoichiometry 12.3 Limiting Reagent and Percent Yield
NOTES: 12.3 – Limiting Reagent & Percent Yield
Stoichiometry.
Chapter 9 – Review Stoichiometry
Chapter 9.
Limiting and Excess Reagents
Limiting Reagent u The limiting reagent is the reactant you run out of first. u The excess reagent is the one you have left over. u The limiting reagent.
Limiting Reagents and Percent Yield
12.3 Limiting Reagent and Percent Yield
Brought to you by Coach Cox PERCENT YIELD. WHAT IS PERCENT YIELD? Theoretical Yield – the maximum amount of product that can be produced from a given.
Chapter 9 – STOICHIOMETRY
11-3 Limiting Reactants Reactions to this point have had one ingredient in excess. When you are given two or both reactant amounts, you have a limiting.
April 7, 2014 Today: Stoichiometry and % Yield. Percent Yield Remember, stoichiometry is used to tell you how much product you can form from X amount.
PERCENT YIELD.
Chapter #9 Stoichiometry. Chapter 9.1 Composition stoichiometry deals with the mass relationships of elements in compounds. Reaction stoichiometry involves.
UNIT 6: STOICHIOMETRY PART 2: STOICHIOMETRY. KEY TERMS Actual yield - Amount of product was actually made in a reaction Dimensional analysis - The practice.
Stoichiometry. Information Given by the Chemical Equation  The coefficients in the balanced chemical equation show the molecules and mole ratio of the.
Chapter 9 – STOICHIOMETRY The MATH of a CHEMICAL REACTION.
Chapter 12 Stoichiometr y. STOY-KEE-AHM-EH-TREE Founded by Jeremias Richter, a German chemist Greek orgin: stoikheion: element & metron: measure Stoichiometry—the.
Reaction Stoichiometry. Objectives Understand the concept of stoichiometry. Be able to make mass-to-mass stoichiometric calculations.
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 reagents In lab a reaction is rarely carried out with exactly the required amounts of each reactant. In lab a reaction is rarely carried out with.
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.
Chapter 12: Stoichiometry
Limiting Reagents and Percent Yield Limiting Reagent If you are given one dozen loaves of bread, a gallon of mustard and three pieces of salami, how.
Limiting Reagent and Percent Yield Chapter 12.3 Page 368.
Stoichiometry & Limiting Reactants. Stoichiometric Calculations The coefficients in the balanced equation give the ratio of moles of reactants and products.
Percent Yield. Definitions The theoretical yield is the maximum amount of product that could be made from the reactants. The actual yield is the amount.
Theoretical Yield and Percent Yield Recipe says makes 3 dozen, you get 30. Your percent yield is 83.33%.
Limiting Reactants Unit 7 1. Limiting Reactants 2.
12.3 Limiting Reagent and Percent Yield > 1 Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc., or its affiliates. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 12 Stoichiometry 12.1.
Review Mg + 2 HCl  MgCl 2 + H 2 How many Liters of H 2 would be produced with 56 g Mg?
Welcome: 3/10/14 Answer the following question: CaCO 3  CaO + CO 2 How many grams of CO 2 can be made from g of CaCO 3 ?
Ch. 9-3 Limiting Reactants & Percent Yield. POINT > Define limiting reactant POINT > Identify which reactant is limiting in a reaction POINT > Define.
Chemistry Chapter 9 - Stoichiometry South Lake High School Ms. Sanders.
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.
Limiting Reagents and Percent Yield Prentice-Hall Chapter 12.3 Dr. Yager.
Unit 6: Limiting Reactants and Percent Yield Chapter 11.3 and 11.4.
12.3 Limiting Reagent and Percent Yield > 1 Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc., or its affiliates. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 12 Stoichiometry 12.1.
The study of quantities of substances in chemical reactions
Stoichiometry From the Greek words “stoicheion” meaning “element”
Chemistry 16.3.
Chapter 9 STOICHIOMETRY
How much can I make? Maximizing Chemical Quantities
Unit 8: Stoichiometry: Part 1
Chapter 12 Review.
Chapter 12 Review.
Theoretical Yield The maximum amount of product that can be produced from a given amount of reactant.
Stoichiometry.
Stoichiometry Vocab Theoretical Yield: the calculated amount of product yielded by a reaction (found through stoichiometry) Actual Yield: the actual amount.
Created by C. Ippolito June 2007
Stoichiometry Chapter 12.
Limiting Reagent and Percent Yield
Stoichiometry & Limiting Reactants
Chapter 12 Stoichiometry 12.3 Limiting Reagent and Percent Yield
Ch 9 Stoichiometry How does this apply to everyday life?
Reaction Stoichiometry
Presentation transcript:

12.3 Limiting Reagent and Percent Yield By: Michelle Alice Ganian

Limiting Reagent In a chemical reaction, an insufficient quantity of any of the reactants will limit the amount of product that is formed. (In terms of ingredients, the smallest amount you have of the ingredients will be the limiting reagent, because it is the substance that will limit the amount of the recipe.) Limiting Reagent-the reagent that determines the amount of product that can be formed by the reaction. When the limiting reagent is used up, the chemical reaction is over. Excess reagent-the reaction that is not completely used up in an equation.

Finding the Limiting Reagent How many grams of metallic copper can be obtained when 54g Al react with 319g of CuSO4? 2Al + 3CuSO4 1Al2(SO4)3 + 3Cu What is the limiting reagent? Step 1: Change grams to moles to find the limiting reagent 54g Al x 1 mole Al/27g Al = 2 mole Al (you have 2Al in the equation) 319g CuSO4 x I mole CuSO4/159.5g CuSO4 = 2 mole CuSO4

Using the Limiting Reagent How many grams of metallic copper can be obtained when 54g Al react with 319g of CuSO4? Step 2: Continue the problem by using the founded limiting reagent to solve for the quantity of the product Limiting reagent = 2 mole CuSO4 2 mole CuSO4 x 3 mole Cu/3 mole CuSO4 x 63.5g Cu/1 mole Cu = 127g Cu

Percent Yield Actual yield - the amount of product that actually forms when a reaction is carried out in a lab Theoretical yield- the maximum amount of product that can be formed from given amounts of reactants Percent yield – the ratio of the actual yield to the theoretical yield expressed as a percent.

Calculating Theoretical Yield What is the theoretical yield of CaO if 24.8g of CaCO3 is heated? CaCO3  CaO3 + CO2 Given mass CaCO3 = 24.8g Molar mass CaCO3 = 100.1 g Molar mass CaO = 56.1g Theoretical yield is unknown. 24.8g CaCO3 x 1 mole CaCO3/100.1g CaCO3 x 1 mole CaO/1 mole CaCO3 x 56.1g CaO/ 1 mole CaO = 13.9g CaO

Calculating for Percent Yield What is the percent yield if 13.1g CaO is actually produced when 24.8g CaCO3 is heated? (You don’t need 24.8 g CaCO3) Percent yield = actual yield/theoretical yield x 100% Percent yield =13.1g CaO/13.9g CaO x 100% = 94.2 Hint: the larger number always goes as the denominator