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Stoichiometry mass and amount relationships between reactants and products in a chemical reaction
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Rules for Solving Stoichiometry Problems 1. A balanced, properly written equation is essential because the coefficients tell you the mole to mole ratio. 2. Converting to moles is essential!
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Example: When CaC 2 reacts with water, acetylene gas (C 2 H 2 ) and calcium hydroxide are produced. How many grams of water are required to produce 1.55 moles of C 2 H 2 ? Step 1: Write a balanced equation. CaC 2 + 2H 2 O C 2 H 2 + Ca(OH) 2
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Step 2: Determine what info you have and what you are trying to determine. You know you need to produce 1.55 moles of C 2 H 2, and you need to determine how many grams of water are required to do this.
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Step 3: What is the mole to mole ratio between the two? HINT! You determine this using the coefficients from the balanced equation. moles of C 2 H 2 : moles of H 2 O 1:2
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Step 4: Apply the ratio to determine how many moles of water will be required. 1.55 mol C 2 H 2 x2 mol H 2 O=3.10 mol H 2 O 11 mol C 2 H 2
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Step 5: The question asks for grams of H 2 O, so convert 3.10 mol of H 2 O to grams. 3.10 mol H 2 Ox 18.0 g =55.8 g H 2 O 1 1 mol H 2 O
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REMEMBER! The ratio supplied by the coefficients of the balanced equation is a mole to mole ratio! It does not apply to grams!
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Stoichiometry Practice 1. Determine the mass of lithium hydroxide produced when 3.80 moles of lithium nitride reacts with water according to the following equation: Li 3 N + 3H 2 O NH 3 + 3LiOH 2. What mass of sodium chloride is produced when 0.45 g of chlorine reacts with excess sodium iodide?
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