Chapter 5 Stoichiometry and the Mole

Opening Essay

At Contrived State University in Anytown, Ohio, a new building was dedicated in March 2010 to house the College of Education. The 100,000-square-foot building has enough office space to accommodate 86 full-time faculty members and 167 full-time staff.

In a fit of monetary excess, the university administration offered to buy new furniture (desks and chairs) and computer workstations for all faculty and staff members moving into the new building. However, to save on long-term energy and materials costs, the university offered to buy only 1 laser printer per 10 employees, with the plan to network the printers together.

How many laser printers did the administration have to buy? It is rather simple to show that 26 laser printers are needed for all the employees. However, what if a chemist was calculating quantities for a chemical reaction? Interestingly enough, similar calculations can be performed for chemicals as well as laser printers.

Figure 5.1 Outfitting a New Building

In filling a new office building with furniture and equipment, managers do calculations similar to those performed by scientists doing chemical reactions.

We have already established that quantities are important in science, especially in chemistry. It is important to make accurate measurements of a variety of quantities when performing experiments. However, it is also important to be able to relate one measured quantity to another, unmeasured quantity. In this chapter, we will consider how we manipulate quantities to relate them to each other.

5.1 Stoichiometry

Learning Objectives

  1. Define stoichiometry.
  2. Relate quantities in a balanced chemical reaction on a molecular basis.

Consider a classic recipe for pound cake: 1 pound of eggs, 1 pound of butter, 1 pound of flour, and 1 pound of sugar. (That’s why it’s called “pound cake.”) If you have 4 pounds of butter, how many pounds of sugar, flour, and eggs do you need? You would need 4 pounds each of sugar, flour, and eggs.

Now suppose you have 1.00 g H2. If the chemical reaction follows the balanced chemical equation

2H2(g) + O2(g) → 2H2O(ℓ)

then what mass of oxygen do you need to make water?

Curiously, this chemical reaction question is very similar to the pound cake question. Both of them involve relating a quantity of one substance to a quantity of another substance or substances. The relating of one chemical substance to another using a balanced chemical reaction is called stoichiometryThe relating of one chemical substance to another using a balanced chemical reaction.. Using stoichiometry is a fundamental skill in chemistry; it greatly broadens your ability to predict what will occur and, more importantly, how much is produced.

Let us consider a more complicated example. A recipe for pancakes calls for 2 cups (c) of pancake mix, 1 egg, and 1/2 c of milk. We can write this in the form of a chemical equation:

2 c mix + 1 egg + 1/2 c milk → 1 batch of pancakes

If you have 9 c of pancake mix, how many eggs and how much milk do you need? It might take a little bit of work, but eventually you will find you need 4½ eggs and 2¼ c milk.

How can we formalize this? We can make a conversion factor using our original recipe and use that conversion factor to convert from a quantity of one substance to a quantity of another substance, similar to the way we constructed a conversion factor between feet and yards in Chapter 2 "Measurements". Because one recipe’s worth of pancakes requires 2 c of pancake mix, 1 egg, and 1/2 c of milk, we actually have the following mathematical relationships that relate these quantities:

2 c pancake mix ⇔ 1 egg ⇔ 1/2 c milk

where ⇔ is the mathematical symbol for “is equivalent to.” This does not mean that 2 c of pancake mix equal 1 egg. However, as far as this recipe is concerned, these are the equivalent quantities needed for a single recipe of pancakes. So, any possible quantities of two or more ingredients must have the same numerical ratio as the ratios in the equivalence.

We can deal with these equivalences in the same way we deal with equalities in unit conversions: we can make conversion factors that essentially equal 1. For example, to determine how many eggs we need for 9 c of pancake mix, we construct the conversion factor

1 egg2 c pancake mix

This conversion factor is, in a strange way, equivalent to 1 because the recipe relates the two quantities. Starting with our initial quantity and multiplying by our conversion factor,

9 c pancake mix×1 egg2 c pancake mix=4.5 eggs

Note how the units cups pancake mix canceled, leaving us with units of eggs. This is the formal, mathematical way of getting our amounts to mix with 9 c of pancake mix. We can use a similar conversion factor for the amount of milk:

9 c pancake mix×1/2 c milk2 c pancake mix=2.25 c milk

Again, units cancel, and new units are introduced.

A balanced chemical equation is nothing more than a recipe for a chemical reaction. The difference is that a balanced chemical equation is written in terms of atoms and molecules, not cups, pounds, and eggs.

For example, consider the following chemical equation:

2H2(g) + O2(g) → 2H2O(ℓ)

We can interpret this as, literally, “two hydrogen molecules react with one oxygen molecule to make two water molecules.” That interpretation leads us directly to some equivalences, just as our pancake recipe did:

2H2 molecules ⇔ 1O2 molecule ⇔ 2H2O molecules

These equivalences allow us to construct conversion factors:

2 molecules H21 molecule O22 molecules H2 2 molecules H2O1 molecule O22 molecules H2O

and so forth. These conversions can be used to relate quantities of one substance to quantities of another. For example, suppose we need to know how many molecules of oxygen are needed to react with 16 molecules of H2. As we did with converting units, we start with our given quantity and use the appropriate conversion factor:

16 molecules H2×1 molecule O22 molecules H2=8 molecules O2

Note how the unit molecules H2 cancels algebraically, just as any unit does in a conversion like this. The conversion factor came directly from the coefficients in the balanced chemical equation. This is another reason why a properly balanced chemical equation is important.

Example 1

How many molecules of SO3 are needed to react with 144 molecules of Fe2O3 given this balanced chemical equation?

Fe2O3(s) + 3SO3(g) → Fe2(SO4)3

Solution

We use the balanced chemical equation to construct a conversion factor between Fe2O3 and SO3. The number of molecules of Fe2O3 goes on the bottom of our conversion factor so it cancels with our given amount, and the molecules of SO3 go on the top. Thus, the appropriate conversion factor is

3 molecules SO31 molecule Fe2O3

Starting with our given amount and applying the conversion factor, the result is

144 molecules Fe2O3×3 molecules SO31 molecule Fe2O3=432 molecules SO3

We need 432 molecules of SO3 to react with 144 molecules of Fe2O3.

Test Yourself

How many molecules of H2 are needed to react with 29 molecules of N2 to make ammonia if the balanced chemical equation is N2 + 3H2 → 2NH3?

Answer

87 molecules

Chemical equations also allow us to make conversions regarding the number of atoms in a chemical reaction because a chemical formula lists the number of atoms of each element in a compound. The formula H2O indicates that there are two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom in each molecule, and these relationships can be used to make conversion factors:

2 atoms H1 molecule H2O1 molecule H2O1 atom O

Conversion factors like this can also be used in stoichiometry calculations.

Example 2

How many molecules of NH3 can you make if you have 228 atoms of H2?

Solution

From the formula, we know that one molecule of NH3 has three H atoms. Use that fact as a conversion factor:

228 atoms H×1 molecule NH33 atoms H=76 molecules NH3

Test Yourself

How many molecules of Fe2(SO4)3 can you make from 777 atoms of S?

Answer

259 molecules

Key Takeaway

  • Quantities of substances can be related to each other using balanced chemical equations.

Exercises

  1. Think back to the pound cake recipe. What possible conversion factors can you construct relating the components of the recipe?

  2. Think back to the pancake recipe. What possible conversion factors can you construct relating the components of the recipe?

  3. What are all the conversion factors that can be constructed from the balanced chemical reaction 2H2(g) + O2(g) → 2H2O(ℓ)?

  4. What are all the conversion factors that can be constructed from the balanced chemical reaction N2(g) + 3H2(g) → 2NH3(g)?

  5. Given the chemical equation

    Na(s) + H2O(ℓ) → NaOH(aq) + H2(g)
    1. Balance the equation.
    2. How many molecules of H2 are produced when 332 atoms of Na react?
  6. Given the chemical equation

    S(s) + O2(g) → SO3(g)
    1. Balance the equation.
    2. How many molecules of O2 are needed when 38 atoms of S react?
  7. For the balanced chemical equation

    6H+(aq) + 2MnO4(aq) + 5H2O2(ℓ) → 2Mn2+(aq) + 5O2(g) + 8H2O(ℓ)

    how many molecules of H2O are produced when 75 molecules of H2O2 react?

  8. For the balanced chemical reaction

    2C6H6(ℓ) + 15O2(g) → 12CO2(g) + 6H2O(ℓ)

    how many molecules of CO2 are produced when 56 molecules of C6H6 react?

  9. Given the balanced chemical equation

    Fe2O3(s) + 3SO3(g) → Fe2(SO4)3

    how many molecules of Fe2(SO4)3 are produced if 321 atoms of S are reacted?

  10. For the balanced chemical equation

    CuO(s) + H2S(g) → CuS + H2O(ℓ)

    how many molecules of CuS are formed if 9,044 atoms of H react?

  11. For the balanced chemical equation

    Fe2O3(s) + 3SO3(g) → Fe2(SO4)3

    suppose we need to make 145,000 molecules of Fe2(SO4)3. How many molecules of SO3 do we need?

  12. One way to make sulfur hexafluoride is to react thioformaldehyde, CH2S, with elemental fluorine:

    CH2S + 6F2 → CF4 + 2HF + SF6

    If 45,750 molecules of SF6 are needed, how many molecules of F2 are required?

  13. Construct the three independent conversion factors possible for these two reactions:

    1. 2H2 + O2 → 2H2O
    2. H2 + O2 → H2O2

    Why are the ratios between H2 and O2 different?

    The conversion factors are different because the stoichiometries of the balanced chemical reactions are different.

  14. Construct the three independent conversion factors possible for these two reactions:

    1. 2Na + Cl2 → 2NaCl
    2. 4Na + 2Cl2 → 4NaCl

    What similarities, if any, exist in the conversion factors from these two reactions?

Answers

  1. 1 pound butter1 pound flour or 1 pound sugar1 pound eggs are two conversion factors that can be constructed from the pound cake recipe. Other conversion factors are also possible.

  2. 2 molecules H21 molecule O2, 1 molecule O22 molecules H2O, 2 molecules H22 molecules H2O, and their reciprocals are the conversion factors that can be constructed.

    1. 2Na(s) + 2H2O(ℓ) → 2NaOH(aq) + H2(g)
    2. 166 molecules
  3. 120 molecules

  4. 107 molecules

  5. 435,000 molecules

    1. 2 molecules H21 molecule O2, 1 molecule O22 molecules H2O, and 2 molecules H22 molecules H2O
    2. 1 molecule H21 molecule O2, 1 molecule O21 molecule H2O2, and 1 molecule H21 molecule H2O2

5.2 The Mole

Learning Objectives

  1. Describe the unit mole.
  2. Relate the mole quantity of substance to its mass.

So far, we have been talking about chemical substances in terms of individual atoms and molecules. Yet we don’t typically deal with substances an atom or a molecule at a time; we work with millions, billions, and trillions of atoms and molecules at a time. What we need is a way to deal with macroscopic, rather than microscopic, amounts of matter. We need a unit of amount that relates quantities of substances on a scale that we can interact with.

Chemistry uses a unit called mole. A moleThe number of things equal to the number of atoms in exactly 12 g of carbon-12; equals 6.022×1023 things. (mol) is a number of things equal to the number of atoms in exactly 12 g of carbon-12. Experimental measurements have determined that this number is very large:

1 mol = 6.02214179 × 1023 things

Understand that a mole means a number of things, just like a dozen means a certain number of things—twelve, in the case of a dozen. But a mole is a much larger number of things. These things can be atoms, or molecules, or eggs; however, in chemistry, we usually use the mole to refer to the amounts of atoms or molecules. Although the number of things in a mole is known to eight decimal places, it is usually fine to use only two or three decimal places in calculations. The numerical value of things in a mole is often called Avogadro’s number (NA), which is also known as the Avogadro constant, after Amadeo Avogadro, an Italian chemist who first proposed its importance.

Example 3

How many molecules are present in 2.76 mol of H2O? How many atoms is this?

Solution

The definition of a mole is an equality that can be used to construct a conversion factor. Also, because we know that there are three atoms in each molecule of H2O, we can also determine the number of atoms in the sample.

2.76 mol H2O×6.022×1023molecules H2O mol H2O=1.66×1024 molecules H2O

To determine the total number of atoms, we have

1.66×1024 molecules H2O×3 atoms1 molecule=4.99×1024atoms

Test Yourself

How many molecules are present in 4.61 × 10−2 mol of O2?

Answer

2.78 × 1022 molecules

How big is a mole? It is very large. Suppose you had a mole of dollar bills that need to be counted. If everyone on earth (about 6 billion people) counted one bill per second, it would take about 3.2 million years to count all the bills. A mole of sand would fill a cube about 32 km on a side. A mole of pennies stacked on top of each other would have about the same diameter as our galaxy, the Milky Way. A mole is a lot of things—but atoms and molecules are very tiny. One mole of carbon atoms would make a cube that is 1.74 cm on a side, small enough to carry in your pocket.

Why is the mole unit so important? It represents the link between the microscopic and the macroscopic, especially in terms of mass. A mole of a substance has the same mass in grams as one unit (atom or molecules) has in atomic mass units. The mole unit allows us to express amounts of atoms and molecules in visible amounts that we can understand.

For example, we already know that, by definition, a mole of carbon has a mass of exactly 12 g. This means that exactly 12 g of C has 6.022 × 1023 atoms:

12 g C = 6.022 × 1023 atoms C

We can use this equality as a conversion factor between the number of atoms of carbon and the number of grams of carbon. How many grams are there, say, in 1.50 × 1025 atoms of carbon? This is a one-step conversion:

1.50×1025 atoms C×12.0000 g C6.022×1023 atoms C=299 g C

But it also goes beyond carbon. Previously we defined atomic and molecular masses as the number of atomic mass units per atom or molecule. Now we can do so in terms of grams. The atomic mass of an element is the number of grams in 1 mol of atoms of that element, while the molecular mass of a compound is the number of grams in 1 mol of molecules of that compound. Sometimes these masses are called molar massesThe mass of 1 mol of a substance in grams. to emphasize the fact that they are the mass for 1 mol of things. (The term molar is the adjective form of mole and has nothing to do with teeth.)

Here are some examples. The mass of a hydrogen atom is 1.0079 u; the mass of 1 mol of hydrogen atoms is 1.0079 g. Elemental hydrogen exists as a diatomic molecule, H2. One molecule has a mass of 1.0079 + 1.0079 = 2.0158 u, while 1 mol H2 has a mass of 2.0158 g. A molecule of H2O has a mass of about 18.01 u; 1 mol H2O has a mass of 18.01 g. A single unit of NaCl has a mass of 58.45 u; NaCl has a molar mass of 58.45 g. In each of these moles of substances, there are 6.022 × 1023 units: 6.022 × 1023 atoms of H, 6.022 × 1023 molecules of H2 and H2O, 6.022 × 1023 units of NaCl ions. These relationships give us plenty of opportunities to construct conversion factors for simple calculations.

Example 4

What is the molar mass of C6H12O6?

Solution

To determine the molar mass, we simply add the atomic masses of the atoms in the molecular formula but express the total in grams per mole, not atomic mass units. The masses of the atoms can be taken from the periodic table or the list of elements in Chapter 17 "Appendix: Periodic Table of the Elements":

6 C = 6 × 12.011 = 72.066
12 H = 12 × 1.0079 = 12.0948
6 O = 6 × 15.999 = 95.994
TOTAL = 180.155 g/mol

Per convention, the unit grams per mole is written as a fraction.

Test Yourself

What is the molar mass of AgNO3?

Answer

169.87 g/mol

Knowing the molar mass of a substance, we can calculate the number of moles in a certain mass of a substance and vice versa, as these examples illustrate. The molar mass is used as the conversion factor.

Example 5

What is the mass of 3.56 mol of HgCl2? The molar mass of HgCl2 is 271.49 g/mol.

Solution

Use the molar mass as a conversion factor between moles and grams. Because we want to cancel the mole unit and introduce the gram unit, we can use the molar mass as given:

3.56 mol HgCl2×271.49 g HgCl2 mol HgCl2=967 g HgCl2

Test Yourself

What is the mass of 33.7 mol of H2O?

Answer

607 g

Example 6

How many moles of H2O are present in 240.0 g of water (about the mass of a cup of water)?

Solution

Use the molar mass of H2O as a conversion factor from mass to moles. The molar mass of water is (1.0079 + 1.0079 + 15.999) = 18.015 g/mol. However, because we want to cancel the gram unit and introduce moles, we need to take the reciprocal of this quantity, or 1 mol/18.015 g:

240.0 g H2O×1 mol H2O18.015 g H2O=13.32 mol H2O

Test Yourself

How many moles are present in 35.6 g of H2SO4 (molar mass = 98.08 g/mol)?

Answer

0.363 mol

Other conversion factors can be combined with the definition of mole—density, for example.

Example 7

The density of ethanol is 0.789 g/mL. How many moles are in 100.0 mL of ethanol? The molar mass of ethanol is 46.08 g/mol.

Solution

Here, we use density to convert from volume to mass and then use the molar mass to determine the number of moles.

100.0 mL ethanol×0.789 g mL×1 mol46.08 g=1.71 mol ethanol

Test Yourself

If the density of benzene, C6H6, is 0.879 g/mL, how many moles are present in 17.9 mL of benzene?

Answer

0.201 mol

Key Takeaways

  • The mole is a key unit in chemistry.
  • The molar mass of a substance, in grams, is numerically equal to one atom’s or molecule’s mass in atomic mass units.

Exercises

  1. How many atoms are present in 4.55 mol of Fe?

  2. How many atoms are present in 0.0665 mol of K?

  3. How many molecules are present in 2.509 mol of H2S?

  4. How many molecules are present in 0.336 mol of acetylene (C2H2)?

  5. How many moles are present in 3.55 × 1024 Pb atoms?

  6. How many moles are present in 2.09 × 1022 Ti atoms?

  7. How many moles are present in 1.00 × 1023 PF3 molecules?

  8. How many moles are present in 5.52 × 1025 penicillin molecules?

  9. Determine the molar mass of each substance.

    1. Si
    2. SiH4
    3. K2O
  10. Determine the molar mass of each substance.

    1. Cl2
    2. SeCl2
    3. Ca(C2H3O2)2
  11. Determine the molar mass of each substance.

    1. Al
    2. Al2O3
    3. CoCl3
  12. Determine the molar mass of each substance.

    1. O3
    2. NaI
    3. C12H22O11
  13. What is the mass of 4.44 mol of Rb?

  14. What is the mass of 0.311 mol of Xe?

  15. What is the mass of 12.34 mol of Al2(SO4)3?

  16. What is the mass of 0.0656 mol of PbCl2?

  17. How many moles are present in 45.6 g of CO?

  18. How many moles are present in 0.00339 g of LiF?

  19. How many moles are present in 1.223 g of SF6?

  20. How many moles are present in 48.8 g of BaCO3?

  21. How many moles are present in 54.8 mL of mercury if the density of mercury is 13.6 g/mL?

  22. How many moles are present in 56.83 mL of O2 if the density of O2 is 0.00133 g/mL?

Answers

  1. 2.74 × 1024 atoms

  2. 1.511 × 1024 molecules

  3. 5.90 mol

  4. 0.166 mol

    1. 28.086 g
    2. 32.118 g
    3. 94.195 g
    1. 26.981 g
    2. 101.959 g
    3. 165.292 g
  5. 379 g

  6. 4,222 g

  7. 1.63 mol

  8. 0.008374 mol

  9. 3.72 mol

5.3 The Mole in Chemical Reactions

Learning Objectives

  1. Balance a chemical equation in terms of moles.
  2. Use the balanced equation to construct conversion factors in terms of moles.
  3. Calculate moles of one substance from moles of another substance using a balanced chemical equation.

Consider this balanced chemical equation:

2H2 + O2 → 2H2O

We interpret this as “two molecules of hydrogen react with one molecule of oxygen to make two molecules of water.” The chemical equation is balanced as long as the coefficients are in the ratio 2:1:2. For instance, this chemical equation is also balanced:

100H2 + 50O2 → 100H2O

This equation is not conventional—because convention says that we use the lowest ratio of coefficients—but it is balanced. So is this chemical equation:

5,000H2 + 2,500O2 → 5,000H2O

Again, this is not conventional, but it is still balanced. Suppose we use a much larger number:

12.044 × 1023 H2 + 6.022 × 1023 O2 → 12.044 × 1023 H2O

These coefficients are also in the ratio of 2:1:2. But these numbers are related to the number of things in a mole: the first and last numbers are two times Avogadro’s number, while the second number is Avogadro’s number. That means that the first and last numbers represent 2 mol, while the middle number is just 1 mol. Well, why not just use the number of moles in balancing the chemical equation?

2H2 + O2 → 2H2O

is the same balanced chemical equation we started with! What this means is that chemical equations are not just balanced in terms of molecules; they are also balanced in terms of moles. We can just as easily read this chemical equation as “two moles of hydrogen react with one mole of oxygen to make two moles of water.” All balanced chemical reactions are balanced in terms of moles.

Example 8

Interpret this balanced chemical equation in terms of moles.

P4 + 5O2 → P4O10

Solution

The coefficients represent the number of moles that react, not just molecules. We would speak of this equation as “one mole of molecular phosphorus reacts with five moles of elemental oxygen to make one mole of tetraphosphorus decoxide.”

Test Yourself

Interpret this balanced chemical equation in terms of moles.

N2 + 3H2 → 2NH3

Answer

One mole of elemental nitrogen reacts with three moles of elemental hydrogen to produce two moles of ammonia.

In Chapter 4 "Chemical Reactions and Equations", Section 4.1 "The Chemical Equation", we stated that a chemical equation is simply a recipe for a chemical reaction. As such, chemical equations also give us equivalences—equivalences between the reactants and the products. However, now we understand that these equivalences are expressed in terms of moles. Consider the chemical equation

2H2 + O2 → 2H2O

This chemical reaction gives us the following equivalences:

2 mol H2 ⇔ 1 mol O2 ⇔ 2 mol H2O

Any two of these quantities can be used to construct a conversion factor that lets us relate the number of moles of one substance to an equivalent number of moles of another substance. If, for example, we want to know how many moles of oxygen will react with 17.6 mol of hydrogen, we construct a conversion factor between 2 mol of H2 and 1 mol of O2 and use it to convert from moles of one substance to moles of another:

17.6 mol H2×1 mol O22 mol H2=8.80 mol O2

Note how the mol H2 unit cancels, and mol O2 is the new unit introduced. This is an example of a mole-mole calculationA stoichiometry calculation when one starts with moles of one substance and convert to moles of another substance using the balanced chemical equation., when you start with moles of one substance and convert to moles of another substance by using the balanced chemical equation. The example may seem simple because the numbers are small, but numbers won’t always be so simple!

Example 9

For the balanced chemical equation

2C4H10(g) + 13O2 → 8CO2(g) + 10H2O(ℓ)

if 154 mol of O2 are reacted, how many moles of CO2 are produced?

Solution

We are relating an amount of oxygen to an amount of carbon dioxide, so we need the equivalence between these two substances. According to the balanced chemical equation, the equivalence is

13 mol O2 ⇔ 8 mol CO2

We can use this equivalence to construct the proper conversion factor. We start with what we are given and apply the conversion factor:

154 mol O2×8 mol CO213 mol O2=94.8 mol CO2

The mol O2 unit is in the denominator of the conversion factor so it cancels. Both the 8 and the 13 are exact numbers, so they don’t contribute to the number of significant figures in the final answer.

Test Yourself

Using the above equation, how many moles of H2O are produced when 154 mol of O2 react?

Answer

118 mol

It is important to reiterate that balanced chemical equations are balanced in terms of moles. Not grams, kilograms, or liters—but moles. Any stoichiometry problem will likely need to work through the mole unit at some point, especially if you are working with a balanced chemical reaction.

Key Takeaways

  • Balanced chemical reactions are balanced in terms of moles.
  • A balanced chemical reaction gives equivalences in moles that allow stoichiometry calculations to be performed.

Exercises

  1. Express in mole terms what this chemical equation means.

    CH4 + 2O2 → CO2 + 2H2O
  2. Express in mole terms what this chemical equation means.

    Na2CO3 + 2HCl → 2NaCl + H2O + CO2
  3. How many molecules of each substance are involved in the equation in Exercise 1 if it is interpreted in terms of moles?

  4. How many molecules of each substance are involved in the equation in Exercise 2 if it is interpreted in terms of moles?

  5. For the chemical equation

    2C2H6 + 7O2 → 4CO2 + 6H2O

    what equivalences can you write in terms of moles? Use the ⇔ sign.

  6. For the chemical equation

    2Al + 3Cl2 → 2AlCl3

    what equivalences can you write in terms of moles? Use the ⇔ sign.

  7. Write the balanced chemical reaction for the combustion of C5H12 (the products are CO2 and H2O) and determine how many moles of H2O are formed when 5.8 mol of O2 are reacted.

  8. Write the balanced chemical reaction for the formation of Fe2(SO4)3 from Fe2O3 and SO3 and determine how many moles of Fe2(SO4)3 are formed when 12.7 mol of SO3 are reacted.

  9. For the balanced chemical equation

    3Cu(s) + 2NO3(aq) + 8H+(aq) → 3Cu2+(aq) + 4H2O(ℓ) + 2NO(g)

    how many moles of Cu2+ are formed when 55.7 mol of H+ are reacted?

  10. For the balanced chemical equation

    Al(s) + 3Ag+(aq) → Al3+(aq) + 3Ag(s)

    how many moles of Ag are produced when 0.661 mol of Al are reacted?

  11. For the balanced chemical reaction

    4NH3(g) + 5O2(g) → 4NO(g) + 6H2O(ℓ)

    how many moles of H2O are produced when 0.669 mol of NH3 react?

  12. For the balanced chemical reaction

    4NaOH(aq) + 2S(s) + 3O2(g) → 2Na2SO4(aq) + 2H2O(ℓ)

    how many moles of Na2SO4 are formed when 1.22 mol of O2 react?

  13. For the balanced chemical reaction

    4KO2(s) + 2CO2(g) → 2K2CO3(s) + 3O2(g)

    determine the number of moles of both products formed when 6.88 mol of KO2 react.

  14. For the balanced chemical reaction

    2AlCl3 + 3H2O(ℓ) → Al2O3 + 6HCl(g)

    determine the number of moles of both products formed when 0.0552 mol of AlCl3 react.

Answers

  1. One mole of CH4 reacts with 2 mol of O2 to make 1 mol of CO2 and 2 mol of H2O.

  2. 6.022 × 1023 molecules of CH4, 1.2044 × 1024 molecules of O2, 6.022 × 1023 molecules of CO2, and 1.2044 × 1024 molecules of H2O

  3. 2 mol of C2H6 ⇔ 7 mol of O2 ⇔ 4 mol of CO2 ⇔ 6 mol of H2O

  4. C5H12 + 8O2 → 5CO2 + 6H2O; 4.4 mol

  5. 20.9 mol

  6. 1.00 mol

  7. 3.44 mol of K2CO3; 5.16 mol of O2

5.4 Mole-Mass and Mass-Mass Calculations

Learning Objectives

  1. From a given number of moles of a substance, calculate the mass of another substance involved using the balanced chemical equation.
  2. From a given mass of a substance, calculate the moles of another substance involved using the balanced chemical equation.
  3. From a given mass of a substance, calculate the mass of another substance involved using the balanced chemical equation.

Mole-mole calculations are not the only type of calculations that can be performed using balanced chemical equations. Recall that the molar mass can be determined from a chemical formula and used as a conversion factor. We can add that conversion factor as another step in a calculation to make a mole-mass calculationA calculation in which you start with a given number of moles of a substance and calculate the mass of another substance involved in the chemical equation, or vice versa., where we start with a given number of moles of a substance and calculate the mass of another substance involved in the chemical equation, or vice versa.

For example, suppose we have the balanced chemical equation

2Al + 3Cl2 → 2AlCl3

Suppose we know we have 123.2 g of Cl2. How can we determine how many moles of AlCl3 we will get when the reaction is complete? First and foremost, chemical equations are not balanced in terms of grams; they are balanced in terms of moles. So to use the balanced chemical equation to relate an amount of Cl2 to an amount of AlCl3, we need to convert the given amount of Cl2 into moles. We know how to do this by simply using the molar mass of Cl2 as a conversion factor. The molar mass of Cl2 (which we get from the atomic mass of Cl from the periodic table) is 70.90 g/mol. We must invert this fraction so that the units cancel properly:

123.2 g Cl2×1 mol Cl270.90 g Cl2=1.738 mol Cl2

Now that we have the quantity in moles, we can use the balanced chemical equation to construct a conversion factor that relates the number of moles of Cl2 to the number of moles of AlCl3. The numbers in the conversion factor come from the coefficients in the balanced chemical equation:

2 mol AlCl33 mol Cl2

Using this conversion factor with the molar quantity we calculated above, we get

1.738 mol Cl2×2 mol AlCl33 mol Cl2=1.159 mol AlCl3

So, we will get 1.159 mol of AlCl3 if we react 123.2 g of Cl2.

In this last example, we did the calculation in two steps. However, it is mathematically equivalent to perform the two calculations sequentially on one line:

123.2 g Cl2×1 mol Cl270.90 g Cl2×2 mol AlCl33 mol Cl2=1.159 mol AlCl3

The units still cancel appropriately, and we get the same numerical answer in the end. Sometimes the answer may be slightly different from doing it one step at a time because of rounding of the intermediate answers, but the final answers should be effectively the same.

Example 10

How many moles of HCl will be produced when 249 g of AlCl3 are reacted according to this chemical equation?

2AlCl3 + 3H2O(ℓ) → Al2O3 + 6HCl(g)

Solution

We will do this in two steps: convert the mass of AlCl3 to moles and then use the balanced chemical equation to find the number of moles of HCl formed. The molar mass of AlCl3 is 133.33 g/mol, which we have to invert to get the appropriate conversion factor:

249 g AlCl3×1 mol AlCl3133.33 g AlCl3=1.87 mol AlCl3

Now we can use this quantity to determine the number of moles of HCl that will form. From the balanced chemical equation, we construct a conversion factor between the number of moles of AlCl3 and the number of moles of HCl:

6 mol HCl2 mol AlCl3

Applying this conversion factor to the quantity of AlCl3, we get

1.87 mol AlCl3×6 mol HCl2 mol AlCl3=5.61 mol HCl

Alternatively, we could have done this in one line:

249 g AlCl3×1  mol AlCl3133.33 g AlCl3×6 mol HCl2 mol AlCl3=5.60 mol HCl

The last digit in our final answer is slightly different because of rounding differences, but the answer is essentially the same.

Test Yourself

How many moles of Al2O3 will be produced when 23.9 g of H2O are reacted according to this chemical equation?

2AlCl3 + 3H2O(ℓ) → Al2O3 + 6HCl(g)

Answer

0.442 mol

A variation of the mole-mass calculation is to start with an amount in moles and then determine an amount of another substance in grams. The steps are the same but are performed in reverse order.

Example 11

How many grams of NH3 will be produced when 33.9 mol of H2 are reacted according to this chemical equation?

N2(g) + 3H2(g) → 2NH3(g)

Solution

The conversions are the same, but they are applied in a different order. Start by using the balanced chemical equation to convert to moles of another substance and then use its molar mass to determine the mass of the final substance. In two steps, we have

33.9 mol H2×2 mol NH33 mol H2=22.6 mol NH3

Now, using the molar mass of NH3, which is 17.03 g/mol, we get

22.6 mol NH3×17.03 g NH31 mol NH3=385 g NH3

Test Yourself

How many grams of N2 are needed to produce 2.17 mol of NH3 when reacted according to this chemical equation?

N2(g) + 3H2(g) → 2NH3(g)

Answer

30.4 g (Note: here we go from a product to a reactant, showing that mole-mass problems can begin and end with any substance in the chemical equation.)

It should be a trivial task now to extend the calculations to mass-mass calculationsA calculation in which you start with a given mass of a substance and calculate the mass of another substance involved in the chemical equation., in which we start with a mass of some substance and end with the mass of another substance in the chemical reaction. For this type of calculation, the molar masses of two different substances must be used—be sure to keep track of which is which. Again, however, it is important to emphasize that before the balanced chemical reaction is used, the mass quantity must first be converted to moles. Then the coefficients of the balanced chemical reaction can be used to convert to moles of another substance, which can then be converted to a mass.

For example, let us determine the number of grams of SO3 that can be produced by the reaction of 45.3 g of SO2 and O2:

2SO2(g) + O2(g) → 2SO3(g)

First, we convert the given amount, 45.3 g of SO2, to moles of SO2 using its molar mass (64.06 g/mol):

45.3 g SO2×1 mol SO264.06 g SO2=0.707 mol SO2

Second, we use the balanced chemical reaction to convert from moles of SO2 to moles of SO3:

0.707 mol SO2×2 mol SO32 mol SO2=0.707 mol SO3

Finally, we use the molar mass of SO3 (80.06 g/mol) to convert to the mass of SO3:

0.707 mol SO3×80.06 g SO31 mol SO3=56.6 g SO3

We can also perform all three steps sequentially, writing them on one line as

45.3 g SO2×1 mol SO264.06  g SO2×2 mol SO32 mol SO2×80.06 g SO31 mol SO3=56.6 g SO3

We get the same answer. Note how the initial and all the intermediate units cancel, leaving grams of SO3, which is what we are looking for, as our final answer.

Example 12

What mass of Mg will be produced when 86.4 g of K are reacted?

MgCl2(s) + 2K(s) → Mg(s) + 2KCl(s)

Solution

We will simply follow the steps

mass K → mol K → mol Mg → mass Mg

In addition to the balanced chemical equation, we need the molar masses of K (39.09 g/mol) and Mg (24.31 g/mol). In one line,

86.4 g K×1 mol K39.09 g K×1 mol Mg2 mol K×24.31 g Mg1 mol Mg=26.87 g Mg

Test Yourself

What mass of H2 will be produced when 122 g of Zn are reacted?

Zn(s) + 2HCl(aq) → ZnCl2(aq) + H2(g)

Answer

3.77 g

Key Takeaways

  • Mole quantities of one substance can be related to mass quantities using a balanced chemical equation.
  • Mass quantities of one substance can be related to mass quantities using a balanced chemical equation.
  • In all cases, quantities of a substance must be converted to moles before the balanced chemical equation can be used to convert to moles of another substance.

Exercises

  1. What mass of CO2 is produced by the combustion of 1.00 mol of CH4?

    CH4(g) + 2O2(g) → CO2(g) + 2H2O(ℓ)
  2. What mass of H2O is produced by the combustion of 1.00 mol of CH4?

    CH4(g) + 2O2(g) → CO2(g) + 2H2O(ℓ)
  3. What mass of HgO is required to produce 0.692 mol of O2?

    2HgO(s) → 2Hg(ℓ) + O2(g)
  4. What mass of NaHCO3 is needed to produce 2.659 mol of CO2?

    2NaHCO3(s) → Na2CO3(s) + H2O(ℓ) + CO2(g)
  5. How many moles of Al can be produced from 10.87 g of Ag?

    Al(NO3) 3(s) + 3Ag → Al + 3AgNO3
  6. How many moles of HCl can be produced from 0.226 g of SOCl2?

    SOCl2(ℓ) + H2O(ℓ) → SO2(g) + 2HCl(g)
  7. How many moles of O2 are needed to prepare 1.00 g of Ca(NO3)2?

    Ca(s) + N2(g) + 3O2(g) → Ca(NO3) 2(s)
  8. How many moles of C2H5OH are needed to generate 106.7 g of H2O?

    C2H5OH(ℓ) + 3O2(g) → 2CO2(g) + 3H2O(ℓ)
  9. What mass of O2 can be generated by the decomposition of 100.0 g of NaClO3?

    2NaClO3 → 2NaCl(s) + 3O2(g)
  10. What mass of Li2O is needed to react with 1,060 g of CO2?

    Li2O(aq) + CO2(g) → Li2CO3(aq)
  11. What mass of Fe2O3 must be reacted to generate 324 g of Al2O3?

    Fe2O3(s) + 2Al(s) → 2Fe(s) + Al2O3(s)
  12. What mass of Fe is generated when 100.0 g of Al are reacted?

    Fe2O3(s) + 2Al(s) → 2Fe(s) + Al2O3(s)
  13. What mass of MnO2 is produced when 445 g of H2O are reacted?

    H2O(ℓ) + 2MnO4(aq) + Br(aq) → BrO3(aq) + 2MnO2(s) + 2OH(aq)
  14. What mass of PbSO4 is produced when 29.6 g of H2SO4 are reacted?

    Pb(s) + PbO2(s) + 2H2SO4(aq) → 2PbSO4(s) + 2H2O(ℓ)
  15. If 83.9 g of ZnO are formed, what mass of Mn2O3 is formed with it?

    Zn(s) + 2MnO2(s) → ZnO(s) + Mn2O3(s)
  16. If 14.7 g of NO2 are reacted, what mass of H2O is reacted with it?

    3NO2(g) + H2O(ℓ) → 2HNO3(aq) + NO(g)
  17. If 88.4 g of CH2S are reacted, what mass of HF is produced?

    CH2S + 6F2 → CF4 + 2HF + SF6
  18. If 100.0 g of Cl2 are needed, what mass of NaOCl must be reacted?

    NaOCl + HCl → NaOH + Cl2

Answers

  1. 44.0 g

  2. 3.00 × 102 g

  3. 0.0336 mol

  4. 0.0183 mol

  5. 45.1 g

  6. 507 g

  7. 4.30 × 103 g

  8. 163 g

  9. 76.7 g

5.5 Yields

Learning Objective

  1. Define and determine theoretical yields, actual yields, and percent yields.

In all the previous calculations we have performed involving balanced chemical equations, we made two assumptions: (1) the reaction goes exactly as written, and (2) the reaction proceeds completely. In reality, such things as side reactions occur that make some chemical reactions rather messy. For example, in the actual combustion of some carbon-containing compounds, such as methane, some CO is produced as well as CO2. However, we will continue to ignore side reactions, unless otherwise noted.

The second assumption, that the reaction proceeds completely, is more troublesome. Many chemical reactions do not proceed to completion as written, for a variety of reasons (some of which we will consider in Chapter 13 "Chemical Equilibrium"). When we calculate an amount of product assuming that all the reactant reacts, we calculate the theoretical yieldAn amount that is theoretically produced as calculated using the balanced chemical reaction., an amount that is theoretically produced as calculated using the balanced chemical reaction.

In many cases, however, this is not what really happens. In many cases, less—sometimes much less—of a product is made during the course of a chemical reaction. The amount that is actually produced in a reaction is called the actual yieldThe amount that is actually produced in a chemical reaction.. By definition, the actual yield is less than or equal to the theoretical yield. If it is not, then an error has been made.

Both theoretical yields and actual yields are expressed in units of moles or grams. It is also common to see something called a percent yield. The percent yieldActual yield divided by theoretical yield times 100% to give a percentage between 0% and 100%. is a comparison between the actual yield and the theoretical yield and is defined as

percent yield=actual yieldtheoretical yield×100%

It does not matter whether the actual and theoretical yields are expressed in moles or grams, as long as they are expressed in the same units. However, the percent yield always has units of percent. Proper percent yields are between 0% and 100%—again, if percent yield is greater than 100%, an error has been made.

Example 13

A worker reacts 30.5 g of Zn with nitric acid and evaporates the remaining water to obtain 65.2 g of Zn(NO3)2. What are the theoretical yield, the actual yield, and the percent yield?

Zn(s) + 2HNO3(aq) → Zn(NO3)2(aq) + H2(g)

Solution

A mass-mass calculation can be performed to determine the theoretical yield. We need the molar masses of Zn (65.39 g/mol) and Zn(NO3)2 (189.41 g/mol). In three steps, the mass-mass calculation is

30.5 g Zn×1 mol Zn65.39 g Zn×1 mol Zn(NO3)21 mol Zn×189.41 g Zn(NO3)21 mol Zn(NO3)2=88.3 g Zn(NO3)2

Thus, the theoretical yield is 88.3 g of Zn(NO3)2. The actual yield is the amount that was actually made, which was 65.2 g of Zn(NO3)2. To calculate the percent yield, we take the actual yield and divide it by the theoretical yield and multiply by 100:

65.2 g Zn(NO3)288.3 Zn(NO3)2×100%=73.8%

The worker achieved almost three-fourths of the possible yield.

Test Yourself

A synthesis produced 2.05 g of NH3 from 16.5 g of N2. What is the theoretical yield and the percent yield?

N2(g) + 3H2(g) → 2NH3(g)

Answer

theoretical yield = 20.1 g; percent yield = 10.2%

Chemistry Is Everywhere: Actual Yields in Drug Synthesis and Purification

Many drugs are the product of several steps of chemical synthesis. Each step typically occurs with less than 100% yield, so the overall percent yield might be very small. The general rule is that the overall percent yield is the product of the percent yields of the individual synthesis steps. For a drug synthesis that has many steps, the overall percent yield can be very tiny, which is one factor in the huge cost of some drugs. For example, if a 10-step synthesis has a percent yield of 90% for each step, the overall yield for the entire synthesis is only 35%. Many scientists work every day trying to improve percent yields of the steps in the synthesis to decrease costs, improve profits, and minimize waste.

Even purifications of complex molecules into drug-quality purity are subject to percent yields. Consider the purification of impure albuterol. Albuterol (C13H21NO2; accompanying figure) is an inhaled drug used to treat asthma, bronchitis, and other obstructive pulmonary diseases. It is synthesized from norepinephrine, a naturally occurring hormone and neurotransmitter. Its initial synthesis makes very impure albuterol that is purified in five chemical steps. The details of the steps do not concern us; only the percent yields do:

impure albuterol → intermediate A percent yield = 70%
intermediate A → intermediate B percent yield = 100%
intermediate B → intermediate C percent yield = 40%
intermediate C → intermediate D percent yield = 72%
intermediate D → purified albuterol percent yield = 35%
overall percent yield = 70% × 100% × 40% × 72% × 35% = 7.5%

That is, only about one-fourteenth of the original material was turned into the purified drug. This gives you one reason why some drugs are so expensive; a lot of material is lost in making a high-purity pharmaceutical.

Key Takeaways

  • Theoretical yield is what you calculate the yield will be using the balanced chemical reaction.
  • Actual yield is what you actually get in a chemical reaction.
  • Percent yield is a comparison of the actual yield with the theoretical yield.

Exercises

  1. What is the difference between the theoretical yield and the actual yield?

  2. What is the difference between the actual yield and the percent yield?

  3. A worker isolates 2.675 g of SiF4 after reacting 2.339 g of SiO2 with HF. What are the theoretical yield and the actual yield?

    SiO2(s) + 4HF(g) → SiF4(g) + 2H2O(ℓ)
  4. A worker synthesizes aspirin, C9H8O4, according to this chemical equation. If 12.66 g of C7H6O3 are reacted and 12.03 g of aspirin are isolated, what are the theoretical yield and the actual yield?

    C7H6O3 + C4H6O3 → C9H8O4 + HC2H3O2
  5. A chemist decomposes 1.006 g of NaHCO3 and obtains 0.0334 g of Na2CO3. What are the theoretical yield and the actual yield?

    2NaHCO3(s) → Na2CO3(s) + H2O(ℓ) + CO2(g)
  6. A chemist combusts a 3.009 g sample of C5H12 and obtains 3.774 g of H2O. What are the theoretical yield and the actual yield?

    C5H12(ℓ) + 8O2(g) → 5CO2 + 6H2O(ℓ)
  7. What is the percent yield in Exercise 3?

  8. What is the percent yield in Exercise 4?

  9. What is the percent yield in Exercise 5?

  10. What is the percent yield in Exercise 6?

Answers

  1. Theoretical yield is what you expect stoichiometrically from a chemical reaction; actual yield is what you actually get from a chemical reaction.

  2. theoretical yield = 4.052 g; actual yield = 2.675 g

  3. theoretical yield = 0.635 g; actual yield = 0.0334 g

  4. 66.02%

  5. 5.26%

5.6 Limiting Reagents

Learning Objectives

  1. Identify a limiting reagent from a set of reactants.
  2. Calculate how much product will be produced from the limiting reagent.
  3. Calculate how much reactant(s) remains when the reaction is complete.

One additional assumption we have made about chemical reactions—in addition to the assumption that reactions proceed all the way to completion—is that all the reactants are present in the proper quantities to react to products. This is not always the case.

Consider Figure 5.2 "Making Water". Here we are taking hydrogen atoms and oxygen atoms (left) to make water molecules (right). However, there are not enough oxygen atoms to use up all the hydrogen atoms. We run out of oxygen atoms and cannot make any more water molecules, so the process stops when we run out of oxygen atoms.

Figure 5.2 Making Water

In this scenario for making water molecules, we run out of O atoms before we use up all the H atoms. Similar situations exist for many chemical reactions when one reactant runs out before the other.

A similar situation exists for many chemical reactions: you usually run out of one reactant before all of the other reactant has reacted. The reactant you run out of is called the limiting reagentThe reactant that runs out first.; the other reactant or reactants are considered to be in excess. A crucial skill in evaluating the conditions of a chemical process is to determine which reactant is the limiting reagent and which is in excess.

The key to recognizing which reactant is the limiting reagent is based on a mole-mass or mass-mass calculation: whichever reactant gives the lesser amount of product is the limiting reagent. What we need to do is determine an amount of one product (either moles or mass) assuming all of each reactant reacts. Whichever reactant gives the least amount of that particular product is the limiting reagent. It does not matter which product we use, as long as we use the same one each time. It does not matter whether we determine the number of moles or grams of that product; however, we will see shortly that knowing the final mass of product can be useful.

For example, consider this reaction:

4As(s) + 3O2(g) → 2As2O3(s)

Suppose we start a reaction with 50.0 g of As and 50.0 g of O2. Which one is the limiting reagent? We need to perform two mole-mass calculations, each assuming that each reactant reacts completely. Then we compare the amount of the product produced by each and determine which is less.

The calculations are as follows:

50.0 g As×1 mol As74.92 g As×2 mol As2O34 mol As=0.334 mol As2O3 50.0 g O2×1 mol O2 32.00 g O2×2 mol As2O33 mol O2=1.04 mol As2O3

Comparing these two answers, it is clear that 0.334 mol of As2O3 is less than 1.04 mol of As2O3, so arsenic is the limiting reagent. If this reaction is performed under these initial conditions, the arsenic will run out before the oxygen runs out. We say that the oxygen is “in excess.”

Identifying the limiting reagent, then, is straightforward. However, there are usually two associated questions: (1) what mass of product (or products) is then actually formed? and (2) what mass of what reactant is left over? The first question is straightforward to answer: simply perform a conversion from the number of moles of product formed to its mass, using its molar mass. For As2O3, the molar mass is 197.84 g/mol; knowing that we will form 0.334 mol of As2O3 under the given conditions, we will get

0.334 mol As2O3×197.84 g As2O31 mol As2O3=66.1 g As2O3

The second question is somewhat more convoluted to answer. First, we must do a mass-mass calculation relating the limiting reagent (here, As) to the other reagent (O2). Once we determine the mass of O2 that reacted, we subtract that from the original amount to determine the amount left over. According to the mass-mass calculation,

50.0 g As×1 mol As74.92 g As×3 mol O24 mol As×32.00 g O21 mol O2=16.0 g O2 reacted

Because we reacted 16.0 g of our original O2, we subtract that from the original amount, 50.0 g, to get the mass of O2 remaining:

50.0 g O2 − 16.0 g O2 reacted = 34.0 g O2 left over

You must remember to perform this final subtraction to determine the amount remaining; a common error is to report the 16.0 g as the amount remaining.

Example 14

A 5.00 g quantity of Rb are combined with 3.44 g of MgCl2 according to this chemical reaction:

2Rb(s) + MgCl2(s) → Mg(s) + 2RbCl(s)

What mass of Mg is formed, and what mass of what reactant is left over?

Solution

Because the question asks what mass of magnesium is formed, we can perform two mass-mass calculations and determine which amount is less.

5.00 g Rb×1 mol Rb85.47 g Rb×1 mol Mg2 mol Rb×24.31 g Mg1 mol Mg=0.711 g Mg 3.44 g MgCl2×1 mol MgCl295.21 g MgCl2×1 mol Mg1 mol MgCl2×24.31 g Mg1 mol Mg=0.878 g Mg

The 0.711 g of Mg is the lesser quantity, so the associated reactant—5.00 g of Rb—is the limiting reagent. To determine how much of the other reactant is left, we have to do one more mass-mass calculation to determine what mass of MgCl2 reacted with the 5.00 g of Rb and then subtract the amount reacted from the original amount.

5.00 g Rb×1 mol Rb85.47 g Rb×1 mol MgCl22 mol Rb×95.21 g Mg1 mol MgCl2=2.78 g MgCl2 reacted

Because we started with 3.44 g of MgCl2, we have

3.44 g MgCl2 − 2.78 g MgCl2 reacted = 0.66 g MgCl2 left

Test Yourself

Given the initial amounts listed, what is the limiting reagent, and what is the mass of the leftover reagent?

MgO(s) 22.7 g+H2S(g)17.9 gMgS(s)+H2O()

Answer

H2S is the limiting reagent; 1.5 g of MgO are left over.

Key Takeaways

  • The limiting reagent is that reactant that produces the least amount of product.
  • Mass-mass calculations can determine how much product is produced and how much of the other reactants remain.

Exercises

  1. The box below shows a group of nitrogen and hydrogen molecules that will react to produce ammonia, NH3. What is the limiting reagent?

  2. The box below shows a group of hydrogen and oxygen molecules that will react to produce water, H2O. What is the limiting reagent?

  3. Given the statement “20.0 g of methane is burned in excess oxygen,” is it obvious which reactant is the limiting reagent?

  4. Given the statement “the metal is heated in the presence of excess hydrogen,” is it obvious which substance is the limiting reagent despite not specifying any quantity of reactant?

  5. Acetylene (C2H2) is formed by reacting 7.08 g of C and 4.92 g of H2.

    2C(s) + H2(g) → C2H2(g)

    What is the limiting reagent? How much of the other reactant is in excess?

  6. Ethane (C2H6) is formed by reacting 7.08 g of C and 4.92 g of H2.

    2C(s) + 3H2(g) → C2H6(g)

    What is the limiting reagent? How much of the other reactant is in excess?

  7. Given the initial amounts listed, what is the limiting reagent, and how much of the other reactant is in excess?

     P4O6(s) 35.6 g+6H2O()4.77 g4H3PO4
  8. Given the initial amounts listed, what is the limiting reagent, and how much of the other reactant is in excess?

     3NO2(g) 377 g+H2O()244 g2HNO3(aq)+NO(g)
  9. To form the precipitate PbCl2, 2.88 g of NaCl and 7.21 g of Pb(NO3)2 are mixed in solution. How much precipitate is formed? How much of which reactant is in excess?

  10. In a neutralization reaction, 18.06 g of KOH are reacted with 13.43 g of HNO3. What mass of H2O is produced, and what mass of which reactant is in excess?

Answers

  1. Nitrogen is the limiting reagent.

  2. Yes; methane is the limiting reagent.

  3. C is the limiting reagent; 4.33 g of H2 are left over.

  4. H2O is the limiting reagent; 25.9 g of P4O6 are left over.

  5. 6.06 g of PbCl2 are formed; 0.33 g of NaCl is left over.

5.7 End-of-Chapter Material

Additional Exercises

  1. How many molecules of O2 will react with 6.022 × 1023 molecules of H2 to make water? The reaction is 2H2(g) + O2(g) → 2H2O(ℓ).

  2. How many molecules of H2 will react with 6.022 × 1023 molecules of N2 to make ammonia? The reaction is N2(g) + 3H2(g) → 2NH3(g).

  3. How many moles are present in 6.411 kg of CO2? How many molecules is this?

  4. How many moles are present in 2.998 mg of SCl4? How many molecules is this?

  5. What is the mass in milligrams of 7.22 × 1020 molecules of CO2?

  6. What is the mass in kilograms of 3.408 × 1025 molecules of SiS2?

  7. What is the mass in grams of 1 molecule of H2O?

  8. What is the mass in grams of 1 atom of Al?

  9. What is the volume of 3.44 mol of Ga if the density of Ga is 6.08 g/mL?

  10. What is the volume of 0.662 mol of He if the density of He is 0.1785 g/L?

  11. For the chemical reaction

    2C4H10(g) + 13O2(g) → 8CO2(g) + 10H2O(ℓ)

    assume that 13.4 g of C4H10 reacts completely to products. The density of CO2 is 1.96 g/L. What volume in liters of CO2 is produced?

  12. For the chemical reaction

    2GaCl3(s) + 3H2(g) → 2Ga(ℓ) + 6HCl(g)

    if 223 g of GaCl3 reacts completely to products and the density of Ga is 6.08 g/mL, what volume in milliliters of Ga is produced?

  13. Calculate the mass of each product when 100.0 g of CuCl react according to the reaction

    2CuCl(aq) → CuCl2(aq) + Cu(s)

    What do you notice about the sum of the masses of the products? What concept is being illustrated here?

  14. Calculate the mass of each product when 500.0 g of SnCl2 react according to the reaction

    2SnCl2(aq) → SnCl4(aq) + Sn(s)

    What do you notice about the sum of the masses of the products? What concept is being illustrated here?

  15. What mass of CO2 is produced from the combustion of 1 gal of gasoline? The chemical formula of gasoline can be approximated as C8H18. Assume that there are 2,801 g of gasoline per gallon.

  16. What mass of H2O is produced from the combustion of 1 gal of gasoline? The chemical formula of gasoline can be approximated as C8H18. Assume that there are 2,801 g of gasoline per gallon.

  17. A chemical reaction has a theoretical yield of 19.98 g and a percent yield of 88.40%. What is the actual yield?

  18. A chemical reaction has an actual yield of 19.98 g and a percent yield of 88.40%. What is the theoretical yield?

  19. Given the initial amounts listed, what is the limiting reagent, and how much of the other reactants are in excess?

     P435.0 g+3NaOH 12.7 g+3H2O9.33 g2Na2HPO4+PH3
  20. Given the initial amounts listed, what is the limiting reagent, and how much of the other reactants are in excess?

     2NaCrO246.3 g+3NaBrO488.2 g+2NaOH32.5 g3NaBrO3+2Na2CrO4+H2O
  21. Verify that it does not matter which product you use to predict the limiting reagent by using both products in this combustion reaction to determine the limiting reagent and the amount of the reactant in excess. Initial amounts of each reactant are given.

     C3H826.3 g+5O221.8 g3CO2(g)+4H2O()
  22. Just in case you suspect Exercise 21 is rigged, do it for another chemical reaction and verify that it does not matter which product you use to predict the limiting reagent by using both products in this combustion reaction to determine the limiting reagent and the amount of the reactant in excess. Initial amounts of each reactant are given.

     2P435.0 g+6NaOH 12.7 g+6H2O9.33 g3Na2HPO4+5PH3

Answers

  1. 1.2044 × 1024 molecules

  2. 145.7 mol; 8.77 × 1025 molecules

  3. 52.8 mg

  4. 2.99 × 10−23 g

  5. 39.4 mL

  6. 20.7 L

  7. 67.91 g of CuCl2; 32.09 g of Cu. The two masses add to 100.0 g, the initial amount of starting material, demonstrating the law of conservation of matter.

  8. 8,632 g

  9. 17.66 g

  10. The limiting reagent is NaOH; 21.9 g of P4 and 3.61 g of H2O are left over.

  11. Both products predict that O2 is the limiting reagent; 20.3 g of C3H8 are left over.