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Stoichiometry Calculations based on Chemical Reactions
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Stoichiometry Stoichiometry is the study of the quantitative relationships between chemical formula and chemical equations It uses the fixed ratio of reactants and products from a balanced reaction equation to determine the quantitative relationships
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Essential Skills Stoichiometry Requires 3 skills: 1) Writing Balanced Equations 2) Determining Mole Ratios 3) Utilizing Molar Masses
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The Stoichiometry Pathway:
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Mole Ratios from Coefficients Write the balanced reaction equation for the complete combustion of propane (C 3 H 8 ) C 3 H 8 + 5 O 2 3 CO 2 + 4 H 2 O The coefficients from the balanced equation are used to establish the relationship between two chemical species in the reaction. (The coefficients establish the slope of the line when graphically analyzing two species in the reaction) Mole ratios can be considered conversion factors that represent equal quantities of different species within that specific reaction.
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Mole Ratios from Coefficients C 3 H 8 + 5 O 2 3 CO 2 + 4 H 2 O How many moles of carbon dioxide can be produced from 1.5 moles of propane? How many moles of oxygen are required to produce 0.25 moles of water? How many moles of propane are needed to react with 1.5 x 10 -5 moles of oxygen?
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From Grams to Grams C 3 H 8 + 5 O 2 3 CO 2 + 4 H 2 O How many grams of water can be produced when 25 grams of propane is combusted? How many grams of water are produced when 75 grams of carbon dioxide are produced according to this reaction? How many grams of carbon dioxide can be produced when 2.5 x 10 -4 grams of propane is combusted?
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Stoichiometry If we can understand how to do these basic problems, the remaining types of stoichiometry problems are simple applications of same process. Determining Limiting Reactants (or Limiting Reagents) Calculating Theoretical Yields This type of problem is essentially the same as a Limiting Reactant problem
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Limiting Reactant Problems The goal of this type of problem is to determine which reactant is present in the lowest stoichiometric amount. In simple terms: Which reactant will be completely consumed first. When a reactant is completely consumed, the reaction stops. Steps to solving LR problems: 1) Read the entire question to determine what it is asking*. 2) Convert the given quantities of reactants to the same product* 3) Determine which reactant makes the smallest amount of that product. The one that does, is the limiting reactant
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Limiting Reactant Problem Consider the following reaction for this question: 4 NH 3 (g) + 5 O 2 (g) 4 NO(g) + 6 H 2 O(g) What is the limiting reactant when 2.0 g of NH 3 reacts with 2.5 g of O 2 ? Determine the moles of NO that can be produced under these conditions.
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Theoretical Yield Problems These are essentially limiting reactant problems. They ask how many moles or grams of a specific product that can be produced based on a limiting reactant You follow the same format of a LR problem, the smallest quantity of product from the LR is the Theoretical Yield Be able to calculate % yield if necessary. (Actual Yield / Theoretical Yield) x 100
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Theoretical Yield Problem Consider the combustion of propane we discussed earlier, C 3 H 8 + 5 O 2 3 CO 2 + 4 H 2 O. Determine the theoretical yield of carbon dioxide in grams when 10.0 grams of propane are reacted with 35.0 grams of oxygen. Calculate the % yield for this reaction if 26.4 grams of carbon dioxide are collect in a laboratory exercise.
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Calculating Quantities of Remaining Reactants If a reaction has a limiting reactant, it also has excess reactant(s) Many types of questions will ask you to determine the amount of the excess reactant(s) remaining. This type of problem is treated the same way as a LR problem, but an additional subtraction step is needed.
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Example Problem Sodium hydroxide reacts with carbon dioxide as follows: 2 NaOH(s) + CO 2 (g) Na 2 CO 3 (s) + H 2 O(l) 1) Which is the limiting reactant when 1.85 moles NaOH and 1.00 mole of CO 2 are allowed to react? 2) How many grams of solid product will be produced? 3) How many moles of excess reactant will remain when the reaction is complete?
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